Montana Disability & Health Home Page | RTC: Rural | Rural Institute | The University of Montana | Publications | Resource Directory
Rural Disability and Rehabilitation
Research Progress Report #29
Oral Health and Hygiene: Priorities for Adults with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Research and Training Center on Disability in Rural Communities, The University of Montana Rural Institute
October 2004
People with intellectual and related developmental disabilities (I/DD)
historically received oral health services in institutional settings. Today,
most people with I/DD live in community group homes or transitional living
arrangements, and use community oral health services.
Background:
In 1999, RTC: Rural researchers used the Life Quality and
Health for Adults with Developmental Disabilities: A Secondary Conditions, Risk
and Protective Factors Surveillance Instrument to gather information from direct
service staff on the prevalence and severity of secondary conditions among the
1,925 adults with I/DD served by the Developmental Disabilities Program of the
Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services (DPHHS). 749 surveys
(39%) were returned. The survey asked about each individual's health, including
oral health and hygiene:
1. Number of visits for dental care and/or teeth cleaning.
2. Presence of own teeth, dentures, or no teeth/appliance.
3. Frequency of, and difficulty with, tooth brushing.
4. Amount of limitation associated with a dental/oral hygiene secondary
condition (Figure 1).
5. Existence of an Individual (Habilitation) Plan objective addressing this
secondary condition.
Figure 1. Secondary Condition Survey: Dental/Oral Health Item
Description of Figure 1.
|
0 1 2 3 IP? Yes No |
Dental/Oral Hygiene Problems |
People with developmental
disabilities are at greater risk for dental malformations and disease. Teeth may be missing, thinly enameled, abnormally shaped, or poorly cared for. This can lead to decay, a poorly fitting bite, tooth aches, or progressive tooth loss. You may also observe consistent bad breath, which can indicate tooth decay or infection. Poor dental hygiene can limit social interactions or eating pleasure. |
Survey Results:
We compared this sample of Montana adults
with I/DD with other adult
Montanans surveyed by the 1999 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
(BRFSS). In 1999, more adults with I/DD (79%) visited a dentist than did other
Montana
adults (64%). Many of the adults with I/DD (40%) had multiple dental visits
(range:
2-12, no comparable BRFSS data). Fewer adults with I/DD (42%) had their teeth
cleaned than did other adult Montanans (62%); adults with I/DD may have
visited the dentist more often for treatment than prevention.
In the sample of adults with I/DD:
1. 82 % had their own teeth (mean age = 40.7 years).
2. 5.5 % had a partial denture (mean age = 53.9 years).
3. 8 % had a full denture (mean age = 58.3 years).
4. 5.4% neither had their own teeth nor a denture (mean age = 57.6 years).
Reasons for tooth loss in these adults with I/DD were not cited. Although the
percentages are not directly comparable to the 1999 Montana BRFSS descriptions,
19
percent of adult BRFSS respondents had lost six or more teeth to decay or gum
disease. While this is similar to the number of adults in the I/DD sample with
reported
tooth loss (18.8%), fewer adults with I/DD were age 64 or older (8.8%). More
than twice
as many BRFSS respondents (19.3%) were 65 or older.
Tooth loss is consistently associated with increased age. Therefore, one would
expect
more BRFSS respondents to report total tooth loss than the younger survey sample
with I/DD. However, more than half (51%) of respondents with I/DD who were 65 or
older had a full denture or had no teeth/no denture, while only 29.2 percent of
1999
Montana BRFSS respondents aged 65 or older had no permanent teeth.
Tooth brushing frequency varied among the respondents with teeth (no comparable
BRFSS data):
1. 6% reported brushing less than once a day
2. 24.2 % brushed once a day
3. 66.6 % brushed more than once a day
4. About half of the sample (48.3%) brushed their teeth independently
5. Of those requiring assistance, 8 percent required complete assistance.
In this sample, dental/oral hygiene problems were common and severely limiting
--
39
percent reported having dental/oral hygiene problems that limited their
activities 5-10
hours per week. Poor dental/oral hygiene ranked as the sixth most-limiting of 45
secondary conditions. Only communication, physical fitness, weight, personal
hygiene,
and persistence/low frustration problems ranked higher.
Almost one-quarter (24.2%) of the sample's individual (habilitation) plans
addressed
dental/oral hygiene problems. Individuals with more limitation from this
secondary
condition were more likely to have dental/oral hygiene-related treatment plans.
However, only half of the 6 percent of respondents with chronic or significant
limitation
(>ten hours a week) due to dental/oral hygiene problems had a treatment plan to
address it.
Our findings that the respondents with epilepsy (17.5 %) reported statistically
more-severe dental/oral hygiene problems are consistent with the literature on
side
effects of seizure-control medications . Emerging literature also cites the
importance of
direct service staff in supporting routine oral hygiene behaviors. This was
consistent
with our observation that persons whose habilitation aides had changed during
the prior
two years reported statistically greater limitation from dental/oral health
problems.
Conclusions:
National surveillance instruments (such as BRFSS) either exclude or
fail
to identify respondents with I/DD. Therefore, these sample data on the oral
health of
adult Montanans with I/DD are important for state planning. Our state plan must
consider that there is only one dentist per 1,920 Montanans, and our population
is
spread across a large, predominantly-rural area. Montana must recruit qualified
dental
professionals, especially those with expertise in treating individuals who have
special
health care needs. The national prevention agenda must be Montana's cornerstone
for an oral health plan that emphasizes programs supporting good oral hygiene
habits.
Many adults with I/DD require specialized oral health training and treatment
(AAPD,
2004), but few dental school graduates are trained to provide it (Wolff et al.,
2004). Our
state's over-extended dentists sometimes deny care to Medicaid and Medicare
beneficiaries (including adults with I/DD). Finally, although the need is great,
we have
found few empirically-tested preventive programs that support good oral hygiene
habits
in this population.
Next Steps:
RTC: Rural researchers have piloted a simple, inexpensive program to
support daily oral hygiene behaviors of adults with I/DD. Program participants
are
taught to brush, and receive brushing devices, daily reciprocal peer support,
and
reinforcement. Preliminary data on plaque, gingivitis and debris show that oral
health
improved within six weeks. The Montana Disability and Health Program, a
partnership
between The University of Montana Rural Institute and Montana DPHHS, plans to
implement this program more broadly with interested Montana People First
chapters
and further evaluate its effectiveness.
Resources:
Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System http://www.cdc.gov/brfss/
National Oral Health Surveillance System
http://www.cdc.gov/nohss/index.htm
Dental Education in Care of People with Disabilities Program, School of
Dentistry, The
University of Washington http://www.dental.washington.edu/decod/
American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry http://www.aapd.org/
National Oral Health Information Clearinghouse
http://www.nohic.nidcr.nih.gov/index.asp
References
Casey, M., Davidson, G., Moscovice, I., et al. (2004). Access to Dental Care for
Rural
Low Income and Minority Populations: Working Paper Series. Minneapolis: The
University of Minnesota.
Wolff, A.J., Waldman, B., Milano, M., et al. (2004). Dental students'
experiences with
and attitudes toward people with mental retardation. The Journal of the American
Dental Association,135, 353-357.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2000). Healthy People 2010:
Volume
II. Second Edition. With Understanding and Improving Health and Objectives for
Improving Health. Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office.
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. (2003). A National Call to Action
to
Promote Oral Health. Rockville, MD: National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial
Research.
For more information, contact:
Meg Ann Traci, Ph.D., Director,
The Montana Disability and Health Program: Living Well Under the Big Sky
Research and Training Center on Disability in Rural Communities
The University of Montana Rural Institute: A Center for Excellence in Disability
Education, Research and Services, 52 Corbin Hall, Missoula, MT 59812-7056
(888) 268-2743 Toll-free; (406) 243-4956 V; (406) 243-4200 TT; (406) 243-2349
Fax
matraci@ruralinstitute.umt.edu ;
http://rtc.ruralinstitute.umt.edu ;
http://mtdh.ruralinstitute.umt.edu
The information provided in this report was supported by grant #U59/CCU821224
from
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The contents are solely
the
responsibility of the author and do not necessarily represent the official views
of CDC.
This report was prepared by Meg Ann Traci, Ph.D., copyright RTC: Rural, 2004. It
is
available in standard, large print, Braille, and ASCII DOS text formats. The
Rural
Disability and Rehabilitation Research Progress Report Series is edited by Diana
Spas.
Montana Disability &
Health Home Page | RTC:
Rural |
Rural Institute | The
University of Montana | Publications
| Resource Directory