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Daily Mouth Care to Prevent Pneumonia in Nursing Homes

University of North Carolina (UNC) logo

University of North Carolina (UNC)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Aging
Pneumonia
Nursing Home

Treatments

Behavioral: Daily Mouth Care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03817450
13-2072
4R01HS022298-03 (U.S. AHRQ Grant/Contract)

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project will determine whether an evidence-based, tested, pragmatic, system-level, comprehensive mouth care program provided to nursing home residents can reduce the incidence of pneumonia. It also will examine matters related to implementation, sustainability, and cost. If effective, the investigators expect this program to be widely adopted and sustained, to result in fewer episodes of pneumonia, and to reduce health-care costs.

Full description

Each year, almost two million episodes of pneumonia are suffered by nursing home (NH) residents across the United States, resulting in more deaths than from any other infection. Further, NH residents acquire pneumonia at a rate 6-10 times higher than older adults in the community, indicating that characteristics of these individuals and/or the NH settings put them at increased pneumonia risk.

Pneumonia is an inflammatory condition usually initiated by the introduction of bacteria into the lung, such as through aspiration. In aspiration, contents from the mouth, throat, or stomach that are colonized with pathogenic bacteria are inhaled into the lungs. Poor oral hygiene is therefore a critical risk factor for pneumonia because it increases the volume and infectious nature of secretions from the mouth and throat.

Considering the high rate of pneumonia in NHs and its relationship to oral hygiene, it should come as no surprise that mouth care provided in NHs is poor. Almost 90% of residents require help with tooth brushing, yet only 16% have their teeth brushed regularly. Reasons for insufficient care include time, other priorities, existing procedures, perceptions that oral health is not vital to overall health, and fear of resistant residents.

Evidence is emerging that improved oral care can prevent pneumonia. However, no studies have developed and tested a program designed specifically for widespread adoption and sustainability. Our research team developed the Mouth Care Without a Battle (MCWB) program, and in pilot-testing, MCWB significantly improved tooth brushing and flossing, reduced dental plaque and gingivitis (which harbor the bacteria that can cause pneumonia), and increased staff knowledge and attitudes related to mouth care.

If MCWB is effective in reducing pneumonia and related hospitalizations and mortality, it would constitute a major advance in disease prevention. Therefore, the aims of this evidence-based, tested, matched-pairs cluster randomized trial are:

1a. Compare the incidence of pneumonia in seven mouth care NHs to the incidence of pneumonia in seven control NHs for two years.

Secondarily:

1b. Compare the case-adjusted incidence of pneumonia in mouth care NHs to the case-adjusted incidence in control NHs, and evaluate whether the intervention effects for pneumonia incidence are modified by resident-level risk factors for pneumonia.

1c. Examine the relationship between the overall incidence of pneumonia and change in average oral health status, as measured by the plaque and gingival indices of cross-sectional random samples of 60 residents per NH at baseline and at the end of the study.

  1. Examine the implementation and sustainability of the mouth care program, including: (a) staff self-efficacy to provide mouth care; (b) frequency of mouth care and related supervision; (c) use of mouth care products; (d) barriers and facilitators to implementation; and (e) cost of the mouth care program.

  2. In regard to secondary outcomes of hospitalization and mortality: 3a. Compare differences in hospitalization and mortality rates (pneumonia and all cause) from baseline through two years for mouth care and control NHs.

3b. Assess the likelihood that the intervention is cost-saving, and estimate the cost per hospitalization avoided attributable to the mouth care program.

These aims will be addressed in a two year matched pairs cluster randomized trial will be conducted in seven pairs of NHs; one half of each pair will be randomly assisted to receive the intervention (MCWB), and the other half will be assigned to the control condition.

Enrollment

1,416 patients

Sex

All

Ages

21+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Residents who are at least 21 years of age and who reside in a participating nursing home
  • Residents who have natural teeth and/or dentures and do not require prophylactic antibiotics prior to a dental examination
  • Staff members who are at least 21 years of age and who work in a participating nursing home and speak English

Exclusion criteria

  • Residents with no natural teeth or dentures
  • Residents who require prophylactic antibiotics prior to a dental examination
  • Non-English speaking staff members
  • Staff members who do not provide direct care to residents

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

1,416 participants in 2 patient groups

Daily Mouth Care
Experimental group
Description:
The intervention consists of training in Mouth Care Without a Battle (MCWB) techniques and support in established quality improvement techniques. MCWB is a system-level, evidence based, tested approach to person-centered daily mouth care, which includes tooth-brushing, flossing, care of the gums, and denture care. MCWB provides training to all certified nursing assistants (CNAs) and nursing supervisors, and also supports the designation and specialized training of a CNA to serve as a dedicated, full-time Oral Care Aide (OCA) to provide mouth care to the residents who are at greatest risk for pneumonia and require specialized support to achieve good oral hygiene.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Daily Mouth Care
Standard Mouth Care
No Intervention group
Description:
Nursing homes will continue to provide standard mouth care to all residents. Nursing home staff will not receive training or supplies in the control condition.

Trial contacts and locations

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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