Advances in Aging Research

Volume 4, Issue 6 (November 2015)

ISSN Print: 2169-0499   ISSN Online: 2169-0502

Google-based Impact Factor: 0.61  Citations  

Visiting Patients at Home: Reasons and Efficiency of Dental House Calls

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DOI: 10.4236/aar.2015.46022    3,715 Downloads   4,912 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

This retrospective study analyzes indications for house calls by dentists in a domiciliary setting. Its database consists in 69 visits made by a dentist office in Munich from 1998 to 2013 at the homes of 29 non-institutionalized seniors (≥62 years old, 15 females, 14 males, average age 83.7 years old). The analysis focused on the patients’ general state of health, their dental and oral health, the kinds of dental treatments administered, as well as economic aspects and the quantitative development in the frequency of house calls during the study period. The most frequent pre-existing conditions that made a house call necessary were cardiovascular illnesses (60%) and dementia diseases (36%). Multi-morbidity, dependency on care, accessibility issues, and frailty because of advanced age played a central role. The patients’ oral health was acceptable, with the exception of those with dementia diseases, who were more frequently toothless (40% versus 5.6%) and had a higher percentage of carious and decayed teeth (26.3% versus 10.3%). The most frequent procedures were treatments for denture sores and the repair of removable dentures (53.6%). The main focus was on reparative dentistry. The average house call took 37 minutes including travel time. Thus, the time needed was a multiple of the time necessary for treatment in the dental office. The lack of economic efficiency may be the reason why many dentists in Germany hesitate to make house calls. Despite the introduction of additional fees for the treatment of patients in need of long-term care on April 1, 2013, the number of house calls is low and increases only slowly. At the same time, the need for house calls will rise in the future due to an increasing proportion of elderly persons in the population and a decline in the percentage of toothless elderly.

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Kretsch, M. and Gresser, U. (2015) Visiting Patients at Home: Reasons and Efficiency of Dental House Calls. Advances in Aging Research, 4, 205-211. doi: 10.4236/aar.2015.46022.

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[1] Domiciliary Dental Care and Supporting Access to Dental Services
Oral Health and Dental Care in the Ageing Population, 2022

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