Abstract

Many older patients, housebound or living in long-term care facilities (LTCFs) have limited access to dental care. This descriptive qualitative study aimed to understand general dental practitioners (GDPs) attitudes and perceived barriers to undertaking Domiciliary Dental Care (DDC) for those patients in Northern Ireland (NI). Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 12 GDPs in Northern Ireland. Interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim. An iterative coding process using theme-analytic methods was used. The data were characterised into four major themes-risk of professional litigation, remuneration for those undertaking DDC, complexity of treatment, and the overall framework of the dental care system in NI. Two minor themes identified were practice culture and reasons for undertaking DDC. The GDPs in the study identified a number of barriers to undertaking DDC including a legal requirement to transport oxygen, lack of organisation and limited oral hygiene care provision in LTCFs, and confusion around their responsibilities for provision of DDC. Those GDPs who were providing DDC indicated that they did so out of kindness and a sense of loyalty to their long-standing patients. The GDPs in this study identified a number of significant barriers to provision of DDC at organisational, structural and clinical levels. The GDPs indicated that they required clarification of their responsibilities around DDC with clear guidelines necessary given the increase in demand for this service.

Highlights

  • Dental domiciliary care (DDC) describes dental care delivered for a patient in an environment outside clinical dental practice, usually in the patient's place of residence

  • DDC is most often provided for older dependent adults in either a long-­term care facility (LTCF) or in the patient's own home as due to illness, disability or frailty they are physically unable to come to the dental practice

  • Figures show the number of patients treated by General dental practitioners (GDPs) via a domiciliary visit has remained around 3000 per year from 2015 to 2020.1 This figure is low when compared to the 35 000 registered care home residents, and that is not including the elderly housebound.[2]

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Summary

Introduction

Dental domiciliary care (DDC) describes dental care delivered for a patient in an environment outside clinical dental practice, usually in the patient's place of residence. Figures show the number of patients treated by GDPs via a domiciliary visit has remained around 3000 per year from 2015 to 2020.1 This figure is low when compared to the 35 000 registered care home residents, and that is not including the elderly housebound.[2] It suggests around 32 000 care home residents do not receive any dental health care in NI. Less GDP domiciliary visits leave the elderly without dental care and places more pressure on the Community Dental Service (CDS), whose main purpose is special care dentistry, usually on a referral basis, but who often have to provide routine DDC when GDPs are unavailable

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