Pneumonia in Long Term Care

Post on 18-Dec-2014

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Pneumonia in dependent adults is pervasive. Many are suffering needlessly because their oral health is contributing to all respiratory diseases. Dental hygienists in most states are unable to care for these people without a prescription from a dentist. It's an unnecessary hurdle.

transcript

Pneumonia

Oral biofilm management for

health

2004

Roughly 915,900 cases of community-acquired pneumonia occur annually among seniors in the United States.

2004

Approximately 1 of every 20 persons aged 85 years or over will have a new episode of community-acquired pneumonia each year

2006There is good evidence to show that improved oral hygiene and frequent professional oral health care reduces the progression or occurrence of respiratory diseases among high-risk elderly adults living in nursing homes… 

J Periodontol. 2006 Sep;77(9):1465-82.Systematic review of the association between respiratory diseases and oral health.

Immunocompetent Seniors

cardiopulmonary disease

poor functional status

low weight

recent weight loss

Higher risk for Community-Acquired Pneumonia

cardiopulmonary disease

poor functional status

low weight

recent weight loss

Nursing Home Acquired Pneumonia

 30-day mortality rates ranging from 10 to 30%

A study looking at the charts of 528 persons with NHAP transferred to acute hospitals for treatment found that advance directives were present only 6.4% of the time.

Given the high 1-year mortality rate forNHAP, clinicians caring for nursing home residents should make it a priority to ensure that advance directives are in place. These should be readily available to help with the decision on whether or not the residentshould be transferred to a hospital, and must also accompany the patient to the acute care facility.

You know when you hear it.

All Due to Biofilm

Typical bacterial pathogens

Streptococcus pneumoniae (penicillin-sensitive and-resistant strains)

Haemophilus influenzae (ampicillin-sensitive and -resistant strains)  Moraxella catarrhalis (all strains penicillin-resistant).

Streptococcus pneumoniae

Haemophilus influenzae

Moraxella catarrhalis

Typical bacterial pathogens attributed to pneumonia

The airway is very close to the mouth – ahem.

Mouth

Lungs

Montana State University Center for Biofilm Engineering used with permission

2005

Calculation of population-based attributable fractions showed that 21% of all cases of pneumonia in our cohort could have been avoided if inadequate oral care and swallowing difficulty were not present.

~ $15,000Per person with NHAP

Contributing to Nursing Home Acquired Pneumonia

Poor oral hygiene

Difficulty swallowing Bedridden

Dementia Diabetes

Contributing to NHAPThese two can be addressed by a licensed

dental hygienist

Poor oral hygiene

Difficulty swallowing Bedridden

Dementia Diabetes

A dental hygienistassisting with oral care can

save thousandsof dollars.

To Summarize

10 to 30

Out of 100,000 people

17%

$15 – 20,000 per

case

21% NHAP can be

avoided with oral

care

Conclusion

Pneumonia is expensiveOral care can decrease incidence by 20%Nursing home acquired pneumonia leads to death.

ConclusionDental hygienists cannot work in Long Term Care facilities unless there is also a dentist there to “oversee” them.

Dental hygienists risk their license if they brush someone’s teeth without a prescription by a dentist to do so.

Call to Action

Find out the limitations of dental hygienists in your state.

Strive for a mandate that all Long Term Care Facilities funded by Medicaid have an independent dental hygienist as the Director of Dental Hygiene, a DDH.

Credits

PowerPoint designed by Cross Link Presentations, LLC

Presentation designShirley Gutkowski, RDH, BSDH, FACE

ScriptShirley Gutkowski, RDH, BSDH, FACE

Photos: Dreamstime, Gutkowski, StoneImages: Montana State University Center for Biofilm EngineeringCharacters: PresenterMedia

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