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Oral Care for Residents in LTC Facilities “Overcoming Common Barriers”. Sarah J. Dirks, DDS Geriatric Dental Group of South Texas, PA San Antonio, Texas 78229 December 2, 2011 1.0 AGD CEUs. Topics:. 1. Two Distinct LTC Goals & the Barriers: Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care
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Oral Care for Residents in LTC Facilities “Overcoming Common Barriers” Sarah J. Dirks, DDS Geriatric Dental Group of South Texas, PA San Antonio, Texas 78229 December 2, 2011 1.0 AGD CEUs
Topics: 1. Two Distinct LTC Goals & the Barriers: • Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care • Provision of Daily Oral Care 2. Three Momentum Makers for Change • Research Momentum • Regulatory Momentum • Culture Change Momentum
Long Term Care Goal #1 Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care
LTCF’s must have a providing dentist. Applied income can be used to pay for oral care. Oral Health part of MDS Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care Fee Schedule More LTC dental practices. TSBDE Rule 115.5
Long Term Care Goal #2 Provision of Daily Oral Care In LTC
Improving Oral Health for LTC Residents in Texas 1. Two Distinct LTC Goals & the Barriers: • Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care - Dental Profession = primary tactical team - Primary Champion = _____________ • Provision of Daily Oral Care • LTC Profession = primary tactical team. • Primary Champion = ____________
Reality Check Goal #1: Medically Necessary Oral Care Goal #2: Routine Daily Oral Care • Dental Profession: stagnant • LTC Profession: in crisis
Improving Oral Health for LTC Residents in Texas • Overcoming Common Barriers • (1) Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care - Dental Profession = primary tactical team • (2) Provision of Daily Oral Care - LTC Profession = primary tactical team. • Three Momentum Makers for Change
Medically Necessary Oral Care is Priority Driven Care . • - Relieve • - Manage • - Prevent • - Increase • - Improve • - Keep
Improving Oral Health for LTC Residents in Texas • Overcoming Common Barriers • (1) Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care - Dental Profession = primary tactical team
Who Provides Medically Necessary Oral Care to LTC Residents? • Geriatrics Practices: Focused on LTC Facilities • Mobile Services & In Office Services • Metropolitan Areas & Smaller Communities • Periodic rotations by contract dentist • Services may be Provided Room by Room • Services Provided in Multipurpose Treatment Room • Partner with Podiatrist? Other Medical Teams? • New facility construction? • General Practices: Focused on Continuum of Care • Mobile hygiene services? & In Office Services • Metropolitan Areas & Smaller Communities
Report:Building Better Oral Health • ADA commissioned independent third-party report on the issue of access to oral health care in Texas • Identify the state’s most pressing issues, needs and challenges associated with improving the oral health of all Texans. • Special focus on the state’s most vulnerable. • www.buildingbetteroralhealth.org • Recommendation #5
Policy Recommendation (5/5)Building Better Oral Health • Expand access to oral health services for older Texans • Provide incentives to encourage dentists to practice in LTC facilities: • Loan payback programs • young dental graduates/retired dentists • (experienced foreign trained dentists – expedited path to licensure?) • (encourage life cycle continuum of care)
Common Barriers: Dental Profession • Mainstream dental office ≠ LTC dental office • Complex Coordination of Care • Solution: Develop LTC administrative systems • Medically Compromised Patients • Solution: Implement strict clinical protocols
Develop Administrative Systems and Protocols Tailored to LTC • Learn LTC lingo/enter the culture of LTC • Have SW or DON fax medical info to office prior to exam visit or hygienist visit to NF. • Establish 3rd party protocols • Medical & Financial RP Consent Forms • Templates for NF premeds, po antibiotics, post-op orders, oral hygiene orders, etc. • Written authorization for hygienist template • Documentation of phone conversations
3rd Party Contacts: Medical/$ POA Resident’s Spouse Primary Care Physician Resident’s dentist of record Director of Nursing Social Worker Business Manager Production musts: Set minimum # of pts Plan on compressed tx hours at NF due to lunch Have pt room #’s Premeds called in the day before Confirm pt will be there Be flexible Be positive Solutions Continued:
Solutions: Strict Clinical Protocols • Preprocedural brushing with Chlorhexidine • Cardiac & stress reduction protocols on all residents • Use high quality pt monitoring device • Blood pressure/O2 saturation • HVE /minimal water/ more upright • INR monitor, blood glucose monitor • Pre and post blood pressures
The Exception becomes the Norm • Complex coordination of care • Administrative systems • Compromised patients • Clinical protocols
GDG Ideal Protocol – “NF Flow” • Resident needs medically necessary oral care • SW completes IME paperwork & calls our tx coordinator to initiate treatment • DDS reviews MARS & provides written authorization for dental hygienist to go to NF: • Begin initial charting, take x-rays, FMD • DDS reviews x-rays & hygienist notes • DDS goes to NF to provide COE
STATE BOARD OF DENTAL EXAMINERS Texas Administrative Code TITLE 22PART 5 CHAPTER 115 EXTENSION OF DUTIES OF AUXILIARY PERSONNEL--DENTAL HYGIENE RULE §115.5 Dental Hygienists Practicing in Certain Facilities
Improving Oral Health for LTC Residents in Texas • Overcoming Common Barriers • (1) Provision of Medically Necessary Oral Care - Dental Profession = primary tactical team • (2) Provision of Daily Oral Care - LTC Profession = primary tactical team. • Three Momentum Makers for Change
Oral Care Provided by Certified Nursing Assistants in Nursing Homes Journal Am Geriatr Soc 54:138-143, 2006 Patricia Coleman, PhD, RN First observational study in U.S. Nursing Homes of oral care actually provided to residents by CNA’s
Dentate Nursing Home Residents CNA Self Report Actual Care Observed CNA’s were told that observations were to understand morning care. Teeth brushed: ? Mouth rinse: ? Teeth flossed: ? Time brushing: ? Clean gloves worn: ? Teeth brushed: ? Mouth rinse: ? Teeth flossed: ? Time brushing: ? Clean gloves worn: ?
Supplies Available to Provide Oral Care of residents had toothbrush/paste of residents had mouthwash of residents had floss had no visible supplies
Three Promising Momentum Makers for Change • Research Momentum • Regulatory Momentum • Culture Change Momentum
Momentum Makers for Change (1) Research: • Utilize BSS for residents in LTC facilities • Basic screening survey for older adults • Determine financial burden for LTC facility to provide daily oral care • Pilot Project: Oral Care Specialty Trained CNA • How many man hours? • 1 CNA/100 bed facility/per day?
Momentum Makers for Change • (2) Regulatory Pressure/Legal Issues • Training of CNAs • BBOH Policy Recommendation #5 • Surveyor Expectations: • BBOH Policy Recommendation #5 • Oral Neglect
Policy Recommendation (5/5)Building Better Oral Health • Expand access to oral health services for older Texans • Mandate that all providers who assist in activities of daily living for the physically dependent or elderly be properly trained in providing oral hygiene.
Momentum Makers for Change • (2) Regulatory Pressure/Legal Issues • Training of CNAs • BBOH Policy Recommendation #5 • Surveyor Expectations: • BBOH Policy Recommendation #5 • Oral Neglect
Procedures for Review of Dental/Oral Status of Residents (1) Interview resident & family (2) Visual observation of residents’ mouths (3) Record review (4) Observation of the oral care furnished
Policy Recommendation (5/5)Building Better Oral Health • Expand access to oral health services for older Texans • Require that nursing home inspections include a mandatory oral health component.
Momentum Makers for Change • (2) Regulatory Pressure/Legal Issues • Training of CNAs • BBOH Policy Recommendation #5 • Surveyor Expectations: • BBOH Policy Recommendation #5 • Oral Neglect
“Defining Oral Neglect in Institutionalized Elderly” “ 34 “A consensus definition for the protection of vulnerable elderly people” Journal of the American Dental Association Vol. 141 – April 2010 Katz, R., Smith,B., Berkey, D.,Guset,A.,O’Connor,M. Federal payments to nursing facilities require that there be no oral neglect.
Time to qualify as neglect 35 • # of days after which failure to have a dental consultation would constitute oral neglect • Acute Condition = 3 days • Chronic Condition = 14 days • # of days after which failure to initiate or reject treatment would constitute oral neglect • Acute Condition = 5 days • Chronic Condition = 21 days
Rapid Oral Decline in Frail Elderly • Multiple co morbid medical conditions • Medication induced xerostomia • Aging restorations • Decreased ability and/or inability for self daily oral care • Decreased ability to get to dental office • Decreased ability to tolerate routine care
Momentum Makers for Change (2) Regulatory Pressure/Legal Concerns • Oral Neglect and relevance to the: • Initial screening of resident’s oral status • Federal mandate • Within 14 days of admission • Usually screened by nurse • Part of Minimum Data Set
Minimum Data Sets • Comprehensive health assessment • Includes oral health • Sections K and L • Goal is to identify oral health problems and therefore a plan of care and intervention is triggered
Minimum Data Set Items Related to Oral Cavity: • Chewing Problem • Mouth Pain • Debris in Mouth • Some or all natural teeth missing • Broken, loose, carious teeth • Inflamed gums • Has daily mouth care by resident or staff 39
Promising Momentum Makers for Change • (1) Research Momentum • (2) Regulatory Momentum • (3) Culture Change Momentum
DON is Key to Geriatric Oral Health Culture Change
Momentum Makers for Change • Culture Change • The Promise of Collaboration: • Dentistry must enter the world of LTC • Redefine and discover new relationships • Trust, unity, shared purpose, & understanding
Momentum Makers for Change • Culture Change • The Promise of Collaboration: • New Relationships: Examples • DON and contracted dentist? • DON and consultant dental hygienist? • Dental hygienist and oral care aide? • TSBDE & expanded function hygienist?
Example: Trust and Collaboration • Minimum data set • Sections K and L • Oral Health • Dental professional provides initial oral screening and/or examination after admission to NF.
Promising Momentum Makers • Culture Change Momentum • Future Collaborations? • Dentist Director & Facility Administrator? • Hygienist Consultant & Facility Administrator? • Facility Wide Oral Care Program • Hygienist Consultant & DON? • Individual Resident Oral Care Plan
LTC Facility Oral Health Program Dental Consultant + Administrator • Oversee/implement facility’s daily oral care program • Coordinate facility’s medically necessary oral care plan • Social worker/family/transportation/pt preferred dentist • Develop yearly/periodic screening or exam schedules • Provide education and in-service training • Specialty training of assigned “Oral Care Aide” • Maintain oral care records/documentation • Maintain needed individualized oral care supplies • Help facility meet federal and state regulations • Conduct periodic quality assurance
Individual Resident’s PlanDental Hygienist Consultant + DON • Resident Advocate • Family Liaison • Work with Social Worker - Funding options • Provision of: • Initial Oral Screening? • Daily Oral Hygiene Plan • Documentation of daily care • Coordination of: • Resident’s Medically Necessary Dental Plan
LTC Hygienist Consultant (Liaison) • Responsible/reports to: • Authorizing dentist • Requires written authorization: TSBDE Rule 115.5 • Administrator??????? Medical director????? • Coordinates with: • Resident and resident’s responsible party • Resident’s preferred dentist/dentist of record • DON and communicate special precautions • OT, PT, Speech Pathology
The Role of a Liaison? • Answer questions • Find resources • Share information • Facilitate processes • Support efforts • Help connect • Solve problems
The promise of transdisciplinary Nurse-dental hygienist collaboration In achieving health-related quality of life for elderly nursing home residents www.dentaliq.com Grand Rounds in Oral-Systemic Medicine September 2006, Vol.1. No. 3 Pages 40 - 49