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Dental health of community-living older people attending secondary healthcare: a cross-sectional comparison between those with and without diagnosed mental illness.

Purandare, Nitin; Woods, Eva; Butler, Sue; Morris, Julie; Vernon, Martin; McCord, James Fraser; Burns, Alistair

International psychogeriatrics / IPA. 2010;22(3):417-25.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mental illness and cognitive impairment are risk factors for poor dental health. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional study to compare the dental health of older patients attending out-patient clinics and day hospitals of old age psychiatry services (the psychiatry group, n = 103) with those attending general/geriatric medical services (the medical group; n = 99). Those living in care homes, and those with diagnosed mental illness (in the medical group) were excluded. A registered mental health nurse assessed mental and general health using validated and previously published instruments. A registered dentist made an independent assessment of dental health (examination to assess oral pathology, status of remaining teeth, and dentures) and made an overall judgment about whether the patient needed any dental treatment (a "normative" need). RESULTS: The normative need for dental treatment was significantly higher among the psychiatry group compared to the medical group (85% vs 52%; p<0.001); even after taking account of the effect of age, gender, teeth status, physical comorbidity, cognition, depressive symptoms, and overall mental and social health [adjusted odds ratio, OR (95% confidence interval): 4.32 (2.09, 8.91)]. The presence of any natural remaining teeth [OR: 4.44 (2.10, 9.42)] and Barthel Index [OR: 0.96 (0.93, 0.99)] were the two other independent predictors of the need for treatment. CONCLUSION: Dental problems are common in community-living older people, especially those with some natural remaining teeth and those with mental illness. There is a need to develop integrated mental health and dental care services for older people with emphasis on prevention of dental problems.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Published date:
Abbreviated journal title:
ISSN:
Place of publication:
England
Volume:
22
Issue:
3
Pagination:
417-25
Digital Object Identifier:
10.1017/S1041610209991438
Pubmed Identifier:
20003632
Pii Identifier:
S1041610209991438
Access state:
Active

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Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:179422
Created by:
Burns, Alistair
Created:
16th October, 2012, 12:01:29
Last modified by:
Burns, Alistair
Last modified:
8th October, 2014, 05:29:42

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