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Oral health of Adelaide nursing home residents: longitudinal study
Author(s) -
Chalmers JM,
Carter KD,
Spencer AJ
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
australasian journal on ageing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.63
H-Index - 34
eISSN - 1741-6612
pISSN - 1440-6381
DOI - 10.1111/j.1741-6612.2004.00019.x
Subject(s) - edentulism , dentures , medicine , nursing homes , dementia , root caries , dentistry , oral health , oral hygiene , geriatric dentistry , tooth loss , incidence (geometry) , gerontology , nursing , disease , physics , pathology , optics
Objective:The Adelaide Dental Study of Nursing Homes aimed to quantify oral disease experience, incidence and increments in Adelaide nursing home residents.Methods:Questionnaires and dental inspections were completed at baseline and at 1‐year for residents from randomly selected Adelaide nursing homes.Results:The residents were very functionally dependent, cognitively impaired and behaviourally difficult older adults with complex oral problems and dental treatment needs. The prevalence of edentulism (total tooth loss) (63%) decreased and more residents were retaining natural teeth. Existing residents had a mean of 10.8 teeth present and new residents had a mean of 12.7 teeth present. Residents’ previous experiences of caries (decay) were high – existing residents had a mean of 1.2 decayed teeth and new residents had a mean of 0.8 decayed teeth. Residents’ caries increments (new decay) over the 1‐year period were high (coronal = 2.5 surfaces; root = 1.0 surfaces), especially in those who had lost weight and who could eat fewer food types. These levels of caries were many times greater than had been reported for community‐dwelling older adults. Large accumulations of plaque, calculus and debris (food) were evident on residents’ natural teeth and dentures, especially those with dementia. Up to 25% of residents owned dentures that were not worn. Residents with dementia gave their carers complex and challenging oral hygiene care problems. Existing and new residents had similar general health and oral health characteristics, with the exceptions that new residents had significantly more filled tooth surfaces, and fewer decayed retained roots.Conclusion:New residents were being admitted to the nursing homes with a compromised oral health status or developed severe oral diseases and conditions within several months of their admittance. Residents’ oral diseases, especially coronal and root caries, rapidly progressed during their stay in residential care.

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