Hoben Matthias, Kent Angelle, Kobagi Nadia, Huynh Kha Tu, Clarke Alix, Yoon Minn N
Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
School of Dentistry, Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
PLoS One. 2017 Jun 13;12(6):e0178913. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178913. eCollection 2017.
Poor oral health has been a persistent problem in nursing home residents for decades, with severe consequences for residents and the health care system. Two major barriers to providing appropriate oral care are residents' responsive behaviors to oral care and residents' lack of ability or motivation to perform oral care on their own.
To evaluate the effectiveness of strategies that nursing home care providers can apply to either prevent/overcome residents' responsive behaviors to oral care, or enable/motivate residents to perform their own oral care.
We searched the databases Medline, EMBASE, Evidence Based Reviews-Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, CINAHL, and Web of Science for intervention studies assessing the effectiveness of eligible strategies. Two reviewers independently (a) screened titles, abstracts and retrieved full-texts; (b) searched key journal contents, key author publications, and reference lists of all included studies; and (c) assessed methodological quality of included studies. Discrepancies at any stage were resolved by consensus. We conducted a narrative synthesis of study results.
We included three one-group pre-test, post-test studies, and one cross-sectional study. Methodological quality was low (n = 3) and low moderate (n = 1). Two studies assessed strategies to enable/motivate nursing home residents to perform their own oral care, and to studies assessed strategies to prevent or overcome responsive behaviors to oral care. All studies reported improvements of at least some of the outcomes measured, but interpretation is limited due to methodological problems.
Potentially promising strategies are available that nursing home care providers can apply to prevent/overcome residents' responsive behaviors to oral care or to enable/motivate residents to perform their own oral care. However, studies assessing these strategies have a high risk for bias. To overcome oral health problems in nursing homes, care providers will need practical strategies whose effectiveness was assessed in robust studies.
几十年来,口腔健康状况不佳一直是养老院居民面临的一个长期问题,给居民和医疗保健系统带来了严重后果。提供适当口腔护理的两个主要障碍是居民对口腔护理的反应行为,以及居民缺乏自行进行口腔护理的能力或动力。
评估养老院护理人员可采用的策略的有效性,这些策略要么用于预防/克服居民对口腔护理的反应行为,要么促使/激励居民自行进行口腔护理。
我们检索了Medline、EMBASE、循证医学评论-考克兰对照试验中央注册库、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)以及科学引文索引数据库(Web of Science),以查找评估合格策略有效性的干预性研究。两名评审员独立进行:(a)筛选标题、摘要并检索全文;(b)搜索关键期刊内容、关键作者出版物以及所有纳入研究的参考文献列表;(c)评估纳入研究的方法学质量。任何阶段的分歧都通过协商解决。我们对研究结果进行了叙述性综合分析。
我们纳入了三项一组的前测、后测研究和一项横断面研究。方法学质量较低(n = 3)和低中等(n = 1)。两项研究评估了促使/激励养老院居民自行进行口腔护理的策略,两项研究评估了预防或克服对口腔护理的反应行为的策略。所有研究均报告至少部分测量结果有所改善,但由于方法学问题,解释受到限制。
养老院护理人员可以采用一些潜在有效的策略来预防/克服居民对口腔护理的反应行为,或促使/激励居民自行进行口腔护理。然而,评估这些策略的研究存在较高的偏倚风险。为了克服养老院中的口腔健康问题,护理人员将需要在严格研究中评估过有效性的实用策略。