Disseminable Evidence-Based Treatment for the Dental Office: Virtual Exposure Tools for Dental Fear - neVR Fear the Dentist
Project Number5R42DE030040-04
Contact PI/Project LeaderADAMS LARSEN, MARGO Other PIs
Awardee OrganizationVIRTUALLY BETTER, INC.
Description
Abstract Text
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Each year over 20 million adults with moderate fear and over 14 million adults with severe fear visit the
dentist. Because fear portends poor future oral health, patients with dental fear come to experience their worst
fears: pain, surgical procedures, and the need for more frequent dental visits. Avoidance is the natural and reinforced response, ironically guaranteeing a repetition of the feared events. Breaking this cycle is the primary
target of this proposal. Standard treatment — compassionate but ultimately counterproductive — includes anti-anxiety medication or more substantial anesthesia, which (a) does nothing to reduce subsequent anxiety or
avoidance, (b) leads to continued dental problems, and (c) perpetuates the cycle of fear—>avoidance—>dental
problems. Alternatively, cognitive-behavioral treatments (CBT) for dental fear have been developed, subjected
to dozens of high-quality trials, and found to be efficacious. However, CBT has, almost exclusively, been offered
only in a few specialty clinics worldwide associated with universities; there is no disseminable model for integrating CBT into the workflow of dental practices. To fill this gap, this Fast-Track STTR proposal describes
plans for development and testing of a marketable product that can bring effective dental fear treatment to
dental offices within the currently existing U.S. practice ecosystem. neVR Fear the DentistTM is a commercializable suite of self-administered eHealth tools to treat dental fear that can be implemented in private practice
dental offices throughout the U.S. and is eminently scalable. neVR Fear the DentistTM comprises three major
evidence-based interventions. First is a self-administered eHealth app for CBT/psychoeducation with exposure
therapy — delivered via a mobile tablet — that can be used privately in waiting rooms. Second is a communication-eliciting intervention, in which the patient records a “Pre-Game Plan” — to be reviewed with the dental
staff before dental services — comprising (1) pre-treatment fear levels, (2) the factor generating the most anxiety, (3) a stop-signal the patient will use to alert dentist, (4) things the dental team can do to maximize this patient's comfort, and (5) a self-generated anxiety management plan. All patients in the treatment group will receive the first two EBIs as a single intervention on the tablet. Third (for patients who are in the severe range) is
a 1-hr virtual reality exposure treatment (VRET). VRET will allow us to provide CBT that can be self-administered within the normal operations of dentistry and will allow every dental practice to be a dental fear specialty
clinic. Such an approach is necessary to shift clinical practice, as the nearly 200,000 U.S. dentists will only
adopt an approach designed, from the bottom up, to fit both the busy-ness and business of 21st-century dental
practices. The research component will use an adequately powered RCT to test both (a) the effectiveness of
neVR Fear the DentistTM and, using the NIH's Experimental Medicine Approach to Behavioral Change model,
(b) whether inhibitory learning is the mechanism through which it affects change.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
Dental fear negatively affects the health of over 53 million American adults. Standard dental treatment
(anti-anxiety medication or anesthesia) is compassionate but maintains the cycle of fear and avoidance;
psychological treatments are effective but are rarely available and not easily disseminated. We propose to
develop and test a suite of self-administered eHealth tools (neVR Fear the DentistTM) to treat dental fear
that can be implemented in private practice dental offices throughout the U.S. and is eminently scalable.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AdoptedAdultAffectAftercareAmericanAnesthesia proceduresAnti-Anxiety AgentsAnxietyAppointmentBehavioralBeliefBrainBusinessesClinicCognitive TherapyCommunicationCosts and BenefitsDataDentalDental AnxietyDental CareDental General PracticeDental OfficesDental StaffDentistryDentistsDevelopment PlansEcosystemEffectivenessEnvironmentEthnic OriginEventEvidence based interventionEvidence based treatmentFocus GroupsFrightFutureGenderHealthHealthcareIndividualInterventionLearningMarketingMediatingMedicineModelingNational Institute of Dental and Craniofacial ResearchOperative Surgical ProceduresOral healthOutcomePainPatient EducationPatientsPersonal SatisfactionPharmaceutical PreparationsPhasePreventivePrivate PracticePrivatizationProceduresPublic HealthQuality of lifeQuasi-experimentRaceRandomized, Controlled TrialsRecordsReportingResearchSedation procedureSelf AdministrationServicesSeveritiesSignal TransductionSmall Business Technology Transfer ResearchSocietiesSurgeonSystemTabletsTestingTrainingUnited States Dept. of Health and Human ServicesUnited States National Institutes of HealthUniversitiesVisitactive controlanxiety managementclinical practicecostdemographicsdesigneHealthexpectationexperiencefollow-upimprovedinnovationintervention effectlife spanmedical specialtiesoperationpreferencepsychoeducationpsychologicresponsesocialstandard caretooltreatment groupuptakevirtualvirtual reality exposure
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research
CFDA Code
121
DUNS Number
010776370
UEI
U3YHM5TMMCZ9
Project Start Date
03-June-2021
Project End Date
31-August-2025
Budget Start Date
01-September-2024
Budget End Date
31-August-2025
Project Funding Information for 2024
Total Funding
$412,775
Direct Costs
$362,143
Indirect Costs
$23,628
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
2024
National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research
$412,775
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
Sub Projects
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