Effects of integrated dental care on oral treatment needs in residents of nursing homes older than 70 years

Publication date

2015-05-01

Authors

Gerritsen, Paul
Cune, Marco
Van Der Bilt, AndriesISNI 000000039453550X
Abbink, J. H.ISNI 0000000394397098
de Putter, CornelisISNI 0000000374565488

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Aim: To determine effects of integrated dental care in older nursing home residents. Methods: In three nursing homes offering integrated dental care, we studied the oral treatment need of 355 residents older than 70 years. To determine effects of integrated care, we discriminated between short-stay residents (≤6 months) and long-term residents (>6 months). Results: Treatment need, determined intraorally by two dentists, remains high among short-stay residents (78%) and long-term residents (67%). The association between treatment need and length of stay was not significantly affected by indication for stay (somatic vs. psychogeriatric). All dentate residents needed oral treatment, except one long-term resident. However, among edentulous residents, particularly with a psychogeriatric indication for stay, treatment need appeared to reduce significantly in time, from 74% to 57%. Conclusion: Despite integrated dental care, oral treatment need remains in virtually all dentate residents and more than half of edentulous residents.

Keywords

de ntal treatment, geriatric dentistry, nursing home residents, Taverne, General Dentistry

Citation

Gerritsen, P, Cune, M, Van Der Bilt, A, Abbink, J & de Putter, C 2015, 'Effects of integrated dental care on oral treatment needs in residents of nursing homes older than 70 years', Special care in dentistry, vol. 35, no. 3, pp. 132-137. https://doi.org/10.1111/scd.12104