The University of York and Hull York Medical School, Castle Hill Hospital, York, United Kingdom.
Department of Health Sciences, The University of York, York, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2021 Dec 1;16(12):e0260766. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260766. eCollection 2021.
Those with severe mental illness (SMI) are at greater risk of having poor oral health, which can have an impact on daily activities such as eating, socialising and working. There is currently a lack of evidence to suggest which oral health interventions are effective for improving oral health outcomes for people with SMI.
This systematic review aims to examine the effectiveness of oral health interventions in improving oral health outcomes for those with SMI.
The review protocol was registered with PROSPERO (ID CRD42020187663). Medline, EMBASE, PsycINFO, AMED, HMIC, CINAHL, Scopus and the Cochrane Library were searched for studies, along with conference proceedings and grey literature sources. Titles and abstracts were dual screened by two reviewers. Two reviewers also independently performed full text screening, data extraction and risk of bias assessments. Due to heterogeneity between studies, a narrative synthesis was undertaken.
In total, 1462 abstracts from the database search and three abstracts from grey literature sources were identified. Following screening, 12 studies were included in the review. Five broad categories of intervention were identified: dental education, motivational interviewing, dental checklist, dietary change and incentives. Despite statistically significant changes in plaque indices and oral health behaviours as a result of interventions using dental education, motivational interviewing and incentives, it is unclear if these changes are clinically significant.
Although some positive results in this review demonstrate that dental education shows promise as an intervention for those with SMI, the quality of evidence was graded as very low to moderate quality. Further research is in this area is required to provide more conclusive evidence.
患有严重精神疾病(SMI)的人患口腔健康状况不佳的风险更高,这会影响他们的日常活动,如进食、社交和工作。目前缺乏证据表明哪些口腔健康干预措施可有效改善 SMI 患者的口腔健康结果。
本系统评价旨在研究口腔健康干预措施对改善 SMI 患者口腔健康结果的有效性。
该综述方案已在 PROSPERO(注册号:CRD42020187663)上注册。通过 Medline、EMBASE、PsycINFO、AMED、HMIC、CINAHL、Scopus 和 Cochrane 图书馆搜索了研究,以及会议论文集和灰色文献来源。两位评审员分别对标题和摘要进行了双次筛选。两位评审员还独立进行了全文筛选、数据提取和偏倚风险评估。由于研究之间存在异质性,因此进行了叙述性综合。
数据库搜索共确定了 1462 篇摘要和灰色文献来源的 3 篇摘要。经过筛选,有 12 项研究纳入了综述。确定了五类干预措施:牙科教育、动机性访谈、牙科检查表、饮食改变和激励措施。尽管由于使用牙科教育、动机性访谈和激励措施,菌斑指数和口腔健康行为发生了统计学上显著的变化,但尚不清楚这些变化是否具有临床意义。
尽管本综述中的一些积极结果表明,牙科教育作为 SMI 患者的干预措施具有一定前景,但证据质量被评为非常低至中等质量。该领域需要进一步研究以提供更具结论性的证据。