Oral hygiene care for adults with dementia in residential aged care facilities

Alan Pearson RN PhD FRCNA FRCN, Jane Chalmers BDS MSc PhD
{"title":"Oral hygiene care for adults with dementia in residential aged care facilities","authors":"Alan Pearson RN PhD FRCNA FRCN,&nbsp;Jane Chalmers BDS MSc PhD","doi":"10.1111/j.1479-6988.2004.00009.x","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div>\n \n <p><b>Objective </b> The objective of this systematic review was to report on the best available evidence relating to oral hygiene for adults with dementia in residential aged care facilities, including:</p>\n <p>\n \n </p><ul>\n \n <li><span>• </span>\n \n \n <p>documenting the prevalence and incidence, as well as the experiences and increments, of oral diseases and conditions</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>• </span>\n \n \n <p>the use of assessment tools by carers to evaluate oral health</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>• </span>\n \n \n <p>oral hygiene care strategies to prevent oral diseases and conditions</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>• </span>\n \n \n <p>the provision of dental treatment and the ongoing management of oral diseases and conditions.</p>\n </li>\n </ul>\n \n <p><b>Inclusion criteria </b> This review considered any randomised or non-randomised controlled studies, cohort studies, case-control studies, multiple time series studies, uncontrolled studies, descriptive studies and opinions of respected authorities (including theses and other publications) related to residents with dementia living in residential aged care facilities in Australia and overseas; community-dwelling adults with dementia; and special needs adult populations (for preventive oral hygiene care strategies and interventions).</p>\n <p>The review considered studies and publications designed to:</p>\n <p>\n \n </p><ul>\n \n <li><span>1 </span>\n \n \n <p>quantify the oral health status of older adults living in residential aged care facilities;</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>2 </span>\n \n \n <p>quantify the oral health status of adults with dementia living in the community and in residential aged care facilities;</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>3 </span>\n \n \n <p>evaluate tools used to assess the oral health of residents by staff and carers working in residential aged care facilities;</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>4 </span>\n \n \n <p>evaluate preventive oral hygiene care strategies and interventions used in special needs adult populations (including adults with dementia); and</p>\n </li>\n \n <li><span>5 </span>\n \n \n <p>evaluate oral health care training and oral hygiene care provision, staff and carers working in residential aged care facilities.</p>\n </li>\n </ul>\n \n <p>Dental outcome measures of interest were those relating to the prevalence, incidence, experiences and increments of oral diseases and conditions including: denture problems, coronal and root caries, periodontal diseases (plaque accumulation, gingivitis, loss-of-attachment), oral mucosal conditions, xerostomia and salivary gland hypofunction, tooth loss, difficulty chewing, behavioural problems and pain/discomfort. Related characteristics and outcomes of interest included: medical conditions, medications, cognitive status, functional status, nutritional status and sociodemographics.</p>\n <p><b>Search strategy </b> The aim of the search was to locate relevant English-language studies and publications appearing between 1980 and 2002. The search utilised a two-step approach, involving an initial search of electronic databases using combinations of key words followed by a second extensive search carried out using the identified key words. This was supplemented with a secondary search of the references cited in the identified studies. Electronic database searched were: Cinahl, Embase, Psycinfo, Medline and Current Contents.</p>\n <p><b>Methodological quality </b> All selected studies were critically appraised by two reviewers prior to inclusion in the review.</p>\n <p><b>Results </b> In regards to relevance, incidence, experiences, and increments of oral diseases and conditions, possible risk factors identified included: saliva dysfunction, polypharmacy, comorbid medical conditions, swallowing and dietary problems, increased functional dependence, need for assistance with oral hygiene care, and poor access and utilisation of dental care.</p>\n <p>Evidence on the use of assessment tools by carers to evaluate residents’ oral health showed that successful assessment of residents with and without dementia by nursing staff requires appropriate staff training by a dental professional. Coupled with appropriate training, an oral assessment screening tool designed for residents with dementia has been successfully used by nursing and care staff to identify residents requiring further review by dental professionals. Expert opinion in the field indicates that oral assessment screenings by a staff member and then by a dentist would ideally be undertaken upon admission to a facility, and regularly thereafter by staff and/or dentists as required.</p>\n <p>Clinicians and researchers suggested that oral hygiene care strategies to prevent oral diseases and conditions were found to be effective in preventing oral diseases, and thus are relevant for use in the resident with dementia.</p>\n <p>In regards to the provision of dental treatment and ongoing management of oral diseases and conditions, the use of adjunctive and preventive aids were found to be effective when introduced in conjunction with a staff training program:</p>\n <p>Expert opinion suggests that behaviour management techniques will increase the potential of performing oral hygiene care interventions.</p>\n <p><b>Conclusions </b> This review suggests that the training of staff in the form of a comprehensive practically oriented program addressing areas such as oral diseases, oral screening assessment, and hands-on demonstration of oral hygiene techniques and products is likely to have a positive impact on the management of oral hygiene care within residential aged care facilities. The review also identified that regular brushing with fluoride toothpaste, use of therapeutic fluoride products and application of therapeutic chlorhexidine gluconate products are validated by research as effective for the general population and some populations with special needs.</p>\n </div>","PeriodicalId":100738,"journal":{"name":"JBI Reports","volume":"2 3","pages":"65-113"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2004-03-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/j.1479-6988.2004.00009.x","citationCount":"82","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JBI Reports","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1479-6988.2004.00009.x","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 82

Abstract

Objective The objective of this systematic review was to report on the best available evidence relating to oral hygiene for adults with dementia in residential aged care facilities, including:

  • documenting the prevalence and incidence, as well as the experiences and increments, of oral diseases and conditions

  • the use of assessment tools by carers to evaluate oral health

  • oral hygiene care strategies to prevent oral diseases and conditions

  • the provision of dental treatment and the ongoing management of oral diseases and conditions.

Inclusion criteria This review considered any randomised or non-randomised controlled studies, cohort studies, case-control studies, multiple time series studies, uncontrolled studies, descriptive studies and opinions of respected authorities (including theses and other publications) related to residents with dementia living in residential aged care facilities in Australia and overseas; community-dwelling adults with dementia; and special needs adult populations (for preventive oral hygiene care strategies and interventions).

The review considered studies and publications designed to:

  • 1

    quantify the oral health status of older adults living in residential aged care facilities;

  • 2

    quantify the oral health status of adults with dementia living in the community and in residential aged care facilities;

  • 3

    evaluate tools used to assess the oral health of residents by staff and carers working in residential aged care facilities;

  • 4

    evaluate preventive oral hygiene care strategies and interventions used in special needs adult populations (including adults with dementia); and

  • 5

    evaluate oral health care training and oral hygiene care provision, staff and carers working in residential aged care facilities.

Dental outcome measures of interest were those relating to the prevalence, incidence, experiences and increments of oral diseases and conditions including: denture problems, coronal and root caries, periodontal diseases (plaque accumulation, gingivitis, loss-of-attachment), oral mucosal conditions, xerostomia and salivary gland hypofunction, tooth loss, difficulty chewing, behavioural problems and pain/discomfort. Related characteristics and outcomes of interest included: medical conditions, medications, cognitive status, functional status, nutritional status and sociodemographics.

Search strategy The aim of the search was to locate relevant English-language studies and publications appearing between 1980 and 2002. The search utilised a two-step approach, involving an initial search of electronic databases using combinations of key words followed by a second extensive search carried out using the identified key words. This was supplemented with a secondary search of the references cited in the identified studies. Electronic database searched were: Cinahl, Embase, Psycinfo, Medline and Current Contents.

Methodological quality All selected studies were critically appraised by two reviewers prior to inclusion in the review.

Results In regards to relevance, incidence, experiences, and increments of oral diseases and conditions, possible risk factors identified included: saliva dysfunction, polypharmacy, comorbid medical conditions, swallowing and dietary problems, increased functional dependence, need for assistance with oral hygiene care, and poor access and utilisation of dental care.

Evidence on the use of assessment tools by carers to evaluate residents’ oral health showed that successful assessment of residents with and without dementia by nursing staff requires appropriate staff training by a dental professional. Coupled with appropriate training, an oral assessment screening tool designed for residents with dementia has been successfully used by nursing and care staff to identify residents requiring further review by dental professionals. Expert opinion in the field indicates that oral assessment screenings by a staff member and then by a dentist would ideally be undertaken upon admission to a facility, and regularly thereafter by staff and/or dentists as required.

Clinicians and researchers suggested that oral hygiene care strategies to prevent oral diseases and conditions were found to be effective in preventing oral diseases, and thus are relevant for use in the resident with dementia.

In regards to the provision of dental treatment and ongoing management of oral diseases and conditions, the use of adjunctive and preventive aids were found to be effective when introduced in conjunction with a staff training program:

Expert opinion suggests that behaviour management techniques will increase the potential of performing oral hygiene care interventions.

Conclusions This review suggests that the training of staff in the form of a comprehensive practically oriented program addressing areas such as oral diseases, oral screening assessment, and hands-on demonstration of oral hygiene techniques and products is likely to have a positive impact on the management of oral hygiene care within residential aged care facilities. The review also identified that regular brushing with fluoride toothpaste, use of therapeutic fluoride products and application of therapeutic chlorhexidine gluconate products are validated by research as effective for the general population and some populations with special needs.

在养老院为患有痴呆症的成年人提供口腔卫生护理
目的本系统综述的目的是报告与老年护理机构中痴呆症成年人口腔卫生相关的最佳可用证据,包括:•记录患病率和发病率,以及经验和增量,口腔疾病和状况•护理人员使用评估工具评估口腔健康•预防口腔疾病和条件的口腔卫生护理策略•提供牙科治疗以及对口腔疾病和状况的持续管理。纳入标准本综述考虑了与居住在澳大利亚和海外养老院的痴呆症患者有关的任何随机或非随机对照研究、队列研究、病例对照研究、多时间序列研究、非对照研究、描述性研究和权威机构的意见(包括论文和其他出版物);社区老年痴呆症患者;以及有特殊需要的成年人口(预防性口腔卫生护理战略和干预措施)。该审查考虑了旨在:1量化居住在养老院的老年人的口腔健康状况的研究和出版物;2量化居住在社区和养老院的痴呆症成年人的口腔健康状况;3评估在养老院工作的工作人员和护理人员用于评估居民口腔健康的工具;4评估特殊需求成年人(包括痴呆症成年人)使用的预防性口腔卫生护理策略和干预措施;以及5评估口腔保健培训和口腔卫生保健的提供、在养老院工作的工作人员和护理人员。感兴趣的牙科结果测量是与口腔疾病和病症的患病率、发病率、经历和增量有关的测量,包括:义齿问题、牙冠和根龋、牙周疾病(牙菌斑积聚、牙龈炎、附着丧失)、口腔粘膜状况、口干症和唾液腺功能减退、牙齿缺失、咀嚼困难,行为问题和疼痛/不适。感兴趣的相关特征和结果包括:医疗条件、药物、认知状态、功能状态、营养状况和社会人口统计。搜索策略搜索的目的是找到1980年至2002年间出现的相关英语研究和出版物。搜索采用了两步方法,包括使用关键字组合对电子数据库进行初步搜索,然后使用已识别的关键字进行第二次广泛搜索。对已确定的研究中引用的参考文献进行了二次检索,以此作为补充。检索到的电子数据库有:Cinahl、Embase、Psycinfo、Medline和Current Contents。方法论质量所有选定的研究在纳入综述之前都由两名评审员进行了批判性评估。结果关于口腔疾病和状况的相关性、发病率、经历和增量,确定的可能风险因素包括:唾液功能障碍、多药治疗、共病医疗状况、吞咽和饮食问题、功能依赖性增加、口腔卫生护理需要帮助,以及牙科护理的获取和利用率低。护理人员使用评估工具评估居民口腔健康的证据表明,护理人员成功评估患有和不患有痴呆症的居民需要牙科专业人员对工作人员进行适当的培训。再加上适当的培训,为痴呆症住院患者设计的口腔评估筛查工具已被护理人员成功用于识别需要牙科专业人员进一步审查的住院患者。该领域的专家意见表明,工作人员和牙医的口腔评估筛查最好在入院时进行,之后根据需要定期由工作人员和/或牙医进行。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信