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. 2025 Jul 4;25(1):1098.
doi: 10.1186/s12903-025-06506-0.

Treatment patterns and clinical interventions in pediatric dental emergencies during COVID-19

Affiliations

Treatment patterns and clinical interventions in pediatric dental emergencies during COVID-19

Michael V Joachim et al. BMC Oral Health. .

Abstract

Background: While COVID-19’s impact on dental services has been widely studied, limited research exists on how the pandemic altered clinical decision-making and treatment selection in pediatric dental emergencies. This study examined changes in treatment patterns and clinical interventions for pediatric dental emergencies during the COVID-19 lockdown, aiming to understand how crisis conditions influence clinical approaches and treatment outcomes.

Methods: This retrospective study analyzed 6,024 emergency dental visits of children under 12 years across three distinct periods: pre-COVID (March-May 2019), during first lockdown (March-May 2020), and post-lockdown (March-May 2021). Data were collected from electronic dental records of a major Israeli healthcare provider operating 50 dental clinics. Treatment categories were classified as conservative (medication only, temporary restorations) or invasive (extractions, pulp therapy). Statistical analysis included chi-square tests for treatment distribution comparisons and multivariate logistic regression to evaluate factors influencing treatment selection, adjusting for age, sex, and presenting conditions.

Results: During lockdown, invasive treatments increased significantly, with extraction rates rising from 18.4 to 24.8% and pulp therapy from 12.2 to 15.6% (p < 0.001). Pharmaceutical-only interventions decreased from 44.6 to 22.4%. Multivariate analysis revealed higher odds of receiving invasive treatment during lockdown (OR = 1.82, 95% CI: 1.54–2.15) compared to pre-COVID period, even after adjusting for presenting conditions. The trend toward invasive treatments persisted but moderated in the post-lockdown period, with rates returning closer to pre-pandemic levels (19.2% for extractions, 11.8% for pulp therapy). Treatment planning showed a significant shift from conservative to invasive interventions during lockdown, with conservative treatments (pharmaceutical management, temporary and permanent restorations) decreasing from 89.6 to 56.1%, while invasive treatments (pulp therapy, extractions, drainage) increased correspondingly.

Conclusions: The pandemic crisis was associated with shifts in treatment patterns, favoring definitive interventions over temporary solutions. This change in clinical decision-making patterns suggests a crisis-induced adaptation in treatment planning, potentially influenced by uncertainty about future care accessibility. These findings provide important insights for developing clinical guidelines for pediatric dental emergency care during future healthcare crises.

Clinical trial number: Not applicable.

Keywords: COVID-19; Clinical decision-making; Dental extractions; Emergency dental care; Healthcare crisis; Invasive dental procedures; Pediatric dentistry; Treatment patterns.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: This study was conducted in compliance with the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the Maccabi Healthcare Services Institutional Review Board (approval number: 0084-20-MHS) and the Ethics Committee of Ariel University. The requirement for individual informed consent was waived due to the retrospective nature of the study and the use of de-identified data. Consent for publication: Not applicable as the manuscript does not contain data from any individual person. Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests. Generative AI use: During the preparation of this manuscript, the authors used Claude (Anthropic) to assist with formatting the manuscript according to journal guidelines and refining language. After using this AI assistant, the authors reviewed, edited, and verified all content for accuracy and take full responsibility for the content of the published article.

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