Impact of Hospital Dentistry on Patients' Food Intake Status in Convalescent Rehabilitation Ward

Author:

Ohno Tomohisa12ORCID,Terada Izumi3,Nomoto Akiko1,Fujishima Ichiro4,Iwasa Yasuyuki25,Umeda Yoshiko26,Kanamori Daisuke27,Kishima Masako28,Sakaguchi Hideo29,Matsuo Koichiro210,Motohashi Yasutomo211,Ozaki Kenichiro212,Minakuchi Shunsuke213

Affiliation:

1. Department of Dentistry Hamamatsu City Rehabilitation Hospital Shizuoka Japan

2. Hospital Dentistry Committee of Japanese Society of Gerodontology Tokyo Japan

3. Department of Rehabilitation Seirei Fukuroi Municipal Hospital Shizuoka Japan

4. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Hamamatsu City Rehabilitation Hospital Shizuoka Japan

5. Department of Dentistry Haradoi Hospital Fukuoka Japan

6. Department of Dentistry Seirei Mikatahara General Hospital Shizuoka Japan

7. Department of Dentistry Fujita Health University Nanakuri Memorial Hospital Mie Japan

8. Department of Dentistry Wakakusa‐Tatsuma Rehabilitation Hospital Osaka Japan

9. Department of Dentistry Ryohoku Hospital Tokyo Japan

10. Department of Oral Health Sciences for Community Welfare, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences Tokyo Medical and Dental University Tokyo Japan

11. Department of Dentistry Musashimurayama Hospital Tokyo Japan

12. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Ashikaga Red Cross Hospital Tochigi Japan

13. Gerodontology and Oral Rehabilitation, Graduate School of Medical and Dental Sciences Tokyo Medical and Dental University Tokyo Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundTreating oral problems with dentist intervention during hospitalisation may improve patients' food intake status.ObjectivesThis study aimed to clarify whether convalescent rehabilitation ward inpatients in a hospital with hospital dentistry (HHD) had a better diet at discharge than those in a hospital without hospital dentistry (HNHD).MethodsRetrospective observational study including inpatients with dental involvement in a HHD with dentists and dental hygienists and HNHD with dental hygienist and visiting dental service between 1 March and 31 August 2022. Data included age, sex, body mass index (BMI), Functional Independent Measure (FIM) motor and cognitive, Oral Health Assessment Tool (OHAT) score, Food Intake LEVEL Scale (FILS), whether the FILS ≥8 (indicating that patient eats also a non‐texture‐modified diet), remained and functional tooth numbers and speech language hearing therapist (SLHT) and dentist interventions. Comparisons between the two hospitals and factors that affected the FILS ≥8 were examined.ResultsA total of 333 and 89 inpatients were included in the HHD and HNHD groups, respectively. After propensity score matching, the HHD group had a significantly higher rate of FILS ≥8, functional tooth numbers at discharge, and SLHT and dentist intervention rates. The multivariable logistic regression analysis for propensity score matching participants showed that the significant independent variables for FILS ≥8 were age, BMI, FILS, FIM motor (all at admission) and SLHT and dentist interventions. Odds ratio for dentist intervention was 14.46 (95% CI: 4.36–48.01).ConclusionsDentists are necessary to improve patients' food intake status in convalescent rehabilitation wards.

Funder

Japanese Association for Dental Science

Publisher

Wiley

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