Dental Hygiene Education (dental + hygiene_education)

Distribution by Scientific Domains


Selected Abstracts


Dental hygiene education for nursing staff in a nursing home for older people

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, Issue 6 2010
Erika Kullberg
kullberg e., sjögren p., forsell m., hoogstraate j., herbst b. & johansson o. (2010) Dental hygiene education for nursing staff in a nursing home for older people. Journal of Advanced Nursing,66(6), 1273,1279. Abstract Title.,Dental hygiene education for nursing staff in a nursing home for older people. Aim., This paper is a report of a study evaluating the effect of a repeated education programme for nursing staff in a home for older people. Background., A strong relationship exists between oral infections and general health complications (especially aspiration pneumonia) among nursing home residents and hospitalized older people. Thus, nursing staff need to be educated in oral hygiene measures. Methods., Forty-three nursing home resident older people (12 men, 31 women, age range 69,99 years) were included in a dental hygiene and gingivitis evaluation using gingival bleeding scores and modified plaque scores. Evaluation was conducted before and 3 weeks after a repeated dental hygiene education for nursing staff at a nursing home in Sweden in 2008. Dental hygiene education had been given 1·5 years previously. Findings., Forty-one residents (12 men and 29 women) were available for evaluation after the repeated dental hygiene education (one died, one had had teeth extracted). There was a reduction in gingival bleeding scores (P < 0·001), and in plaque scores (P < 0·001). Conclusion., Repeated dental hygiene education improves the dental hygiene among nursing home resident older people. In order to succeed it may be necessary to address attitudes and perceptions towards oral care in such a dental hygiene education programme for nursing staff. Improved oral hygiene contributes to reducing the incidence of healthcare-associated pneumonia among nursing home resident older people, and thus to reduced healthcare costs. [source]


Comment from the DDHV in response to your article: ,Establishing dental hygiene education in Germany: current facts and future perspectives'

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DENTAL HYGIENE, Issue 3 2004
Beate Gaterman President
[source]


Towards international curriculum standards

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DENTAL HYGIENE, Issue 1 2003
Phebe Blitz
Abstract:, In 1998, the House of Delegates of the International Federation of Dental Hygiene requested that the education committee of the federation develop curriculum guidelines to serve as models for countries that were initiating dental hygiene educational programmes. This article reviews the process of guideline development, identifies challenges and directions for the future. A review of topics, goal and descriptions of 2, 3 and 4 years is presented. The process of development of the guidelines provided an opportunity for discussion of differences in dental hygiene paradigm from various countries. Participants began to understand the legal, cultural and educational differences that have an impact on curriculum for health care. It is a beginning in the process of developing international educational standards in dental hygiene education. [source]


Dental hygiene education for nursing staff in a nursing home for older people

JOURNAL OF ADVANCED NURSING, Issue 6 2010
Erika Kullberg
kullberg e., sjögren p., forsell m., hoogstraate j., herbst b. & johansson o. (2010) Dental hygiene education for nursing staff in a nursing home for older people. Journal of Advanced Nursing,66(6), 1273,1279. Abstract Title.,Dental hygiene education for nursing staff in a nursing home for older people. Aim., This paper is a report of a study evaluating the effect of a repeated education programme for nursing staff in a home for older people. Background., A strong relationship exists between oral infections and general health complications (especially aspiration pneumonia) among nursing home residents and hospitalized older people. Thus, nursing staff need to be educated in oral hygiene measures. Methods., Forty-three nursing home resident older people (12 men, 31 women, age range 69,99 years) were included in a dental hygiene and gingivitis evaluation using gingival bleeding scores and modified plaque scores. Evaluation was conducted before and 3 weeks after a repeated dental hygiene education for nursing staff at a nursing home in Sweden in 2008. Dental hygiene education had been given 1·5 years previously. Findings., Forty-one residents (12 men and 29 women) were available for evaluation after the repeated dental hygiene education (one died, one had had teeth extracted). There was a reduction in gingival bleeding scores (P < 0·001), and in plaque scores (P < 0·001). Conclusion., Repeated dental hygiene education improves the dental hygiene among nursing home resident older people. In order to succeed it may be necessary to address attitudes and perceptions towards oral care in such a dental hygiene education programme for nursing staff. Improved oral hygiene contributes to reducing the incidence of healthcare-associated pneumonia among nursing home resident older people, and thus to reduced healthcare costs. [source]