The aim of the study was to examine the oral health and treatment needs of chronically hospitalized psychiatric patients in Israel. Ten percent of the patients hospitalized for more than 2 years in the 18 psychiatric institutions in Israel were selected at random. The dental status (DMF-T index) was calculated, demographic and medical data were retrieved from the files. Of the 431 patients examined (250 men, 181 women, average age 54 years) 312 patients had only partial natural dentition. The average DMF-T score was 26.74 (out of 32), one of the highest in the literature. The caries component accounted for 2.3% of the DMF-T, the missing teeth component 72% and the restored teeth component 5%. There was an adverse correlation between age and caries and between duration of hospitalization and number of teeth. The average number of carious and missing teeth was higher than in the healthy population. No all-edentulous patients had dentures. These findings confirm the urgent need for an intervention program to improve dental health care in high-risk, difficult-to-treat, psychiatric chronic inpatients.
Many institutionalized patients with psychiatric disease have been discharged into the community and the patients who remain hospitalized are at a particularly high risk for dental disease. This study assessed the oral health and treatment needs of chronically hospitalized patients with psychiatric disease in Israel. A random sample of 301 patients hospitalized for more than 1 year in 14 of 18 psychiatric institutions in Israel was drawn from the National Psychiatric Hospitalization Registry, and 84.4% of them were examined. Their dental status was evaluated using decayed, missing, filled teeth (DMF-T) index and demographic and medical data were retrieved from the patients' files. Of the 254 patients examined, 4 (1.6%) were caries-free, 176 (69%) patients had only a partial natural dentition, while 66 (26%) were edentulous. The average DMF-T score was 23.8. The caries component accounted for 2.7 of the DMF-T, the missing teeth component was 20, and the restored teeth component was only 1.1. There was a negative correlation between age and treated caries, and a positive correlation between age and missing teeth. Not all edentulous patients had dentures. These findings confirm the need to improve the oral health of chronic psychiatric inpatients and the need for dental treatment. The existing policy should be adjusted to integrate the currently separated delivery of the dental services for institutions and community settings. Dental professionals in the health service should be rewarded to restore teeth in this population rather than just to extract them.
The results suggest a substantial improvement in the dental health of this at-risk population after the dental reform in psychiatric hospitals. However, oral health needs are still not fully met, and therefore, additional organizational efforts for further prevention and treatment of dental diseases are required.
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