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- Title
Dysphagia and Oral Health Concerns in Long-Term Care.
- Authors
Affoo, Rebecca; Polacco, Rebecca Cliffe; Lam, Bonnie; Ma, Jinhui; Steele, Catriona M.; Namasivayam-MacDonald, Ashwini
- Abstract
Swallowing impairment, or dysphagia, is highly prevalent in older people living in long-term care, as are oral health concerns such as missing teeth and periodontitis. Texture-modified diets are frequently prescribed for long-term care residents to manage concerning oral health conditions and dysphagia, but their use is associated with increased risk of malnutrition, dehydration, and reduced quality of life. This survey study was conducted to explore the knowledge and perspectives of long-term care staff pertaining to swallowing disorders, oral health, texture-modified diet use, and barriers and facilitators to identifying and advocating for swallowing and/or oral health assessments for long-term care residents. The survey was developed with input from an advisory panel and refined through two rounds of Delphi-method polling. The survey was administered to staff working in long-term care facilities in roles that involved face-to-face contact with residents in the provinces of Ontario, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundland and Labrador. Complete responses were obtained from 148 participants who primarily reported working as nursing assistants, health care aides, or personal support workers in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. The results suggest that frontline long-term care staff may have limited knowledge of swallowing disorders, and overreliance on texture-modified diets is likely. Instrumental swallowing evaluations and professional oral health assessments appear to be rarely accessed. Speech-language pathologist involvement on long-term care interprofessional teams could be beneficial for educating staff, providing comprehensive management of swallowing impairments, and curbing the overuse of texture-modified diets in long-term care.
- Subjects
CANADA; PROFESSIONS; DEGLUTITION; HEALTH services accessibility; PATIENT advocacy; ORAL hygiene; CONFIDENCE; ATTITUDES of medical personnel; ORAL health; CROSS-sectional method; DEGLUTITION disorders; UNLICENSED medical personnel; FISHER exact test; RESPIRATORY obstructions; QUESTIONNAIRES; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; NURSES; COUGH; MASTICATION; RESEARCH funding; PHYSICIAN practice patterns; STATISTICAL sampling; THEMATIC analysis; LONG-term health care; DELPHI method; COVID-19 pandemic
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Speech-Language Pathology & Audiology, 2023, Vol 47, Issue 2, p109
- ISSN
1913-200X
- Publication type
Article