The Claim

Dental pain is not significantly associated with gender, age, or education level, indicating that its impact on oral health-related quality of life is consistent across these demographic groups in the studied population.

Source: Assessment of dental pain and its association with dental anxiety and oral health-related quality of life

What the research says

Supports is higher

Support is ahead, but a single strong opposing study can change this.

Supports
44score
Challenges
0score

These are independent scores, not a percentage. Higher-grade studies count more, so a single strong opposing study can outweigh several weaker ones.

Correlation
1 study reviewed
In plain English

Whether you're male or female, young or old, or have more or less education doesn't seem to change how much dental pain affects your daily life — everyone feels about the same impact.

See the scientific wording

Dental pain is not significantly associated with gender, age, or education level, suggesting its impact on oral health-related quality of life is consistent across these demographic groups in this population.

What the research says

1 study
  1. Study: Assessment of dental pain and its association with dental anxiety and oral health-related quality of life

    The study found that whether you're male or female, young or old, or have more or less education, dental pain affects your quality of life about the same way — so the claim that it doesn't vary by these factors is backed up.

Score breakdown, mechanism chain, raw evidence, ideal studies needed & 1 supporting studies

Fit Body Science verdict — we translate health claims into clear verdicts backed by peer-reviewed research.

Not medical advice. For informational purposes only. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making health decisions.