Assessing the Effectiveness of Digital Tools (Mobile Apps, Tele-dentistry, and Online Platforms) in Promoting Preventive Oral Health Behaviors
Omolayo Yetunde Abimbola *
Premier Care Dental, New-Jersey, USA.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
Background: The proliferation of digital health technologies has transformed healthcare delivery, yet their effectiveness in promoting preventive oral health behaviors remains inadequately assessed. This study evaluates the impact of mobile applications, tele-dentistry platforms, and online educational tools on oral hygiene practices and screening behaviors.
Methods: A systematic evaluation of digital oral health interventions was conducted, analyzing data from 2,847 participants distributed across three intervention groups: mobile health application users, tele-dentistry platform users, and online educational platform users, alongside corresponding control groups. Behavioral outcomes were tracked over an 18-month follow-up period to assess sustained engagement and long-term effectiveness. The study employed a mixed-methods approach combining quantitative usage analytics, behavioral outcome measurements, and qualitative user feedback assessments.
Results: Mobile oral health applications demonstrated significant improvements in brushing frequency (p<0.001), with 67.3% of users maintaining twice-daily brushing habits compared to 42.1% in control groups. Tele-dentistry consultations increased preventive dental visit completion rates by 34.8%. Online educational platforms showed modest effects on knowledge acquisition (effect size d=0.58) but stronger impacts on intention-behavior translation among younger demographics.
Conclusions: Digital tools exhibit substantial promise for scaling preventive oral health interventions, particularly when incorporating gamification, personalized feedback mechanisms, and integrated appointment systems. However, effectiveness varies significantly across demographic groups, with digital literacy and socioeconomic factors influencing engagement patterns.
Keywords: Digital health, oral hygiene, mobile health applications, tele-dentistry, preventive dentistry, health behavior change, mHealth, dental public health