Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People

AimOral care is one of the most neglected nursing practices owing to a lack of training, standard nursing oral care guidelines and low confidence and skills. There is little evidence to inform the development of oral care training and guidelines, which ideally should be done in collaboration with or...

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Published in:INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OLDER PEOPLE NURSING
Main Authors: Oda, Keiko; Bakri, Nazahiah N.; Majeed, Sarah; Bartlett, Shennae; Thomson, Murray W.; Parsons, John; Boyd, Michal; Ferguson, Anna C.; Smith, Moira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: WILEY 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001321484100001
author Oda
Keiko; Bakri
Nazahiah N.; Majeed
Sarah; Bartlett
Shennae; Thomson
Murray W.; Parsons
John; Boyd
Michal; Ferguson
Anna C.; Smith
Moira
spellingShingle Oda
Keiko; Bakri
Nazahiah N.; Majeed
Sarah; Bartlett
Shennae; Thomson
Murray W.; Parsons
John; Boyd
Michal; Ferguson
Anna C.; Smith
Moira
Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
Geriatrics & Gerontology; Nursing
author_facet Oda
Keiko; Bakri
Nazahiah N.; Majeed
Sarah; Bartlett
Shennae; Thomson
Murray W.; Parsons
John; Boyd
Michal; Ferguson
Anna C.; Smith
Moira
author_sort Oda
spelling Oda, Keiko; Bakri, Nazahiah N.; Majeed, Sarah; Bartlett, Shennae; Thomson, Murray W.; Parsons, John; Boyd, Michal; Ferguson, Anna C.; Smith, Moira
Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OLDER PEOPLE NURSING
English
Article
AimOral care is one of the most neglected nursing practices owing to a lack of training, standard nursing oral care guidelines and low confidence and skills. There is little evidence to inform the development of oral care training and guidelines, which ideally should be done in collaboration with oral health professionals. Further, there is a lack of research, particularly in New Zealand, with nursing staff caring for care-dependent older people, including those ageing in their own homes. This pilot study aimed to determine the impact of oral care training on nursing staff knowledge, attitudes and confidence in supporting community-dwelling older peoples' oral care.MethodMixed methods design comprising delivery of an oral healthcare and assessment training intervention by a team comprising nursing and oral health professionals, pre- and post-intervention questionnaires (N = 14) and a post-intervention focus group with community-based nursing staff (N = 5).ResultsStaff knowledge significantly improved (p = 0.046) following interprofessional collaborative training, but attitude and confidence scores did not (p = 0.127), although focus group responses suggested that participants' confidence was heightened. Participants expressed the need to implement oral care practices to benefit clients' health, clarify roles and identify oral care as a core competency. They sought to make individual- and organisational-level practice changes accordingly.ConclusionOral care training based on interprofessional collaboration and education enhances nursing staff knowledge but not their confidence in oral care provision. Ongoing, hands-on practical training for nursing staff in collaboration with oral health professionals has the potential to advance nursing oral-care practice and improve care-dependent older peoples' oral care.Implication for PracticeOral care training and education with oral health professionals is effective to enhance nursing staff knowledge and awareness in oral health care. However, transforming knowledge into nursing oral care practice requires hands on practical training and ongoing collaboration with oral health professionals to improve care-dependent older people's oral health care.
WILEY
1748-3735
1748-3743
2024
19
6
10.1111/opn.12656
Geriatrics & Gerontology; Nursing

WOS:001321484100001
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001321484100001
title Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
title_short Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
title_full Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
title_fullStr Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
title_full_unstemmed Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
title_sort Improving Nursing Oral Care Practice for Community-Dwelling Care-Dependent Older People
container_title INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OLDER PEOPLE NURSING
language English
format Article
description AimOral care is one of the most neglected nursing practices owing to a lack of training, standard nursing oral care guidelines and low confidence and skills. There is little evidence to inform the development of oral care training and guidelines, which ideally should be done in collaboration with oral health professionals. Further, there is a lack of research, particularly in New Zealand, with nursing staff caring for care-dependent older people, including those ageing in their own homes. This pilot study aimed to determine the impact of oral care training on nursing staff knowledge, attitudes and confidence in supporting community-dwelling older peoples' oral care.MethodMixed methods design comprising delivery of an oral healthcare and assessment training intervention by a team comprising nursing and oral health professionals, pre- and post-intervention questionnaires (N = 14) and a post-intervention focus group with community-based nursing staff (N = 5).ResultsStaff knowledge significantly improved (p = 0.046) following interprofessional collaborative training, but attitude and confidence scores did not (p = 0.127), although focus group responses suggested that participants' confidence was heightened. Participants expressed the need to implement oral care practices to benefit clients' health, clarify roles and identify oral care as a core competency. They sought to make individual- and organisational-level practice changes accordingly.ConclusionOral care training based on interprofessional collaboration and education enhances nursing staff knowledge but not their confidence in oral care provision. Ongoing, hands-on practical training for nursing staff in collaboration with oral health professionals has the potential to advance nursing oral-care practice and improve care-dependent older peoples' oral care.Implication for PracticeOral care training and education with oral health professionals is effective to enhance nursing staff knowledge and awareness in oral health care. However, transforming knowledge into nursing oral care practice requires hands on practical training and ongoing collaboration with oral health professionals to improve care-dependent older people's oral health care.
publisher WILEY
issn 1748-3735
1748-3743
publishDate 2024
container_volume 19
container_issue 6
doi_str_mv 10.1111/opn.12656
topic Geriatrics & Gerontology; Nursing
topic_facet Geriatrics & Gerontology; Nursing
accesstype
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url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001321484100001
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