A Qualitative Study Exploring the Barriers and Facilitators for Maintaining Oral Health and Using Dental Service in People with Severe Mental Illness: Perspectives from Service Users and Service Providers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Participants and Setting
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Theme 1: Ameliorating the Problem
3.1.1. Impact of Mental Ill-Health
“I mean I can spend days when I can’t actually get out of bed never mind think about cleaning my teeth, you know that’s just not something that’s going to happen.” (Service user J-06 with diagnosis of bipolar disorder).
“I think, when you have a severe mental illness, you can neglect yourself. And a part of that can be you neglect your oral health.” (Service user H-03 with diagnosis of schizophrenia).
“I mean, at one point I was really good and I was doing everything you know brushing three times a day, using the little inter dental brushes, the mouthwash, I was at the top end of the regime and then my mental health got worse, I think during the second lockdown and that’s when I lost the momentum and I’m struggling to get that momentum back.” (Service user M-02 with diagnosis of schizophrenia).
“if somebody said that well Hayley (pseudonym) can’t look after you today, I drive away for a while, you know, a couple of weeks, if need be, I know she’s moved to another dentist I say where she’s moved to please? because you know, I trust that person, you know I would want to be on her caseload and because it’s an important thing to people who have endured poor mental health and serious mental illness that when they start to trust somebody it becomes a very particular relationship.” (Service user J-04 with diagnosis of bipolar disorder).
“I think it’s really a common thing like a lot of people have had experiences that you know felt very intrusive and as an invasive and around the mouth, it makes sense to me that, like dentistry is really triggering for that and really replicate some of that feeling of powerlessness feeling of being out of control, it being painful like having to have your mouth open and you’re not in control of that.” (Service user Sa-07 with diagnosis of bipolar disorder)
“This level of education is really needed with these groups of individuals around trauma and you know, so that they are psychologically informed and trauma informed. You know who wants to put anybody through any kind of distress, but you know so it’s a group of people that really do need to learn more about their patients.” (Service user K-05 with diagnosis of schizophrenia and autism).
3.1.2. Having a Positive Attitude
“I think it’s just important not to judge and actually what you think may be normal for a group of patients isn’t and if some of my patients brush maybe once or twice a week, then that’s better than never and that’s actually all I can expect from them. So, I think it’s about being realistic and non-judgmental and starting with basic things…” (Service provider C-01 working as a community dentist).
“So just as much as tooth brushing is a habit, it’s a healthy habit and it needs to be encouraged so again it just comes back to the way in which that conversation happens. It’s not the ‘you need to do it like this’, we need ‘we’re here to educate you and tell you what to do’, it’s more ‘do you understand the benefits of what I am teaching you and can you demonstrate it to me so that I know that you’re able to do it well yourself’ and that’s the approach that I think could go somewhere.” (Service provider B-10, special care dentist).
3.1.3. Keeping Oral Health on the Agenda
“I think that sometimes people may misunderstand that oral health just means mouth and teeth but actually it’s about the whole of the person, including medical but also including and I suppose it’s sort of taking a rounded approach to the person and sort of a holistic approach for that person.” (Service provider C-01, community dentist).
“I think education is quite the key and also trying to break down those barriers and say you know we are kind of patient people, we do understand your problems and anxieties and try to find ways of managing that and dealing with that and showing them that it’s not as bad as what they think is.” (Service provider- H-04, special care dentist).
“Yes, indeed clinicians don’t tend to raise things if they’re a bit anxious about whether they’re able to deal with what comes up. So, I think there is a need for some mental health training for the dentist. May be even mental health first aid course that can be two days. Not expecting the dentists to train as mental health professionals, that’s a little bit training we have.” (Service provider- D-07, caring for a person with schizophrenia).
“I think there’s a real awareness now that physical and mental health go hand in hand, and we need to have an angle on both and doesn’t mean you have to be an expert in dentistry in dental hygiene, but just having a general awareness of kind of I don’t know what warning signs or things to look out for. Just making sure, a lot of it might just be making sure people have the regular checks and understanding the importance of that.” (Service provider S-06, occupational therapist).
3.2. Theme 2: Use of a Tailored Approach
3.2.1. Need to Be Heard and Understood
“Like the stigma and discrimination around mental health in society generally I think comes into it. People feel anxious that they’re going to be judged and misunderstood and I think that you know, makes it difficult for people, especially like in the acute phase of their illness to sort of make contact with other health providers.” (Service user Sa-07 with diagnosis of schizophrenia).
“Mental health, I would say it’s already exploited you know in terms of not giving patients a voice and disabilities can be very life limiting. So, giving people the options and scope around that gives them a strong voice and a recognition that they are involved in their own treatment in healthcare.” (Service user S-01 with diagnosis of schizophrenia).
3.2.2. Considering the Individual Needs
“Patient should be provided information about the potential side effects of their medication that they are prescribed, they should have a fully informed choice. So again, that will come under the mental health side of things. I think, historically, some mental health services avoided telling people about all the potential effects because the medications were pretty problematic. Hopefully now that’s pretty much legal and patients in the hereafter provide fully informed consent but I am not sure how thoroughly people still do that” (Service provider C-05, clinical psychologist).
“The main thing should just be getting people through the door and to have an examination or to have education about the kind of oral hygiene, that is where there will be the most benefit.” (Service provider C-05, clinical psychologist).
“I have had people who don’t want to discuss their trauma or their past and have consented to the person who is supporting them to discuss it and so sometimes having that other person there, it gives them a different way of communicating and if they don’t want to speak about it directly but have allowed their carer or support worker to do on their behalf, that’s also happened sometimes.” (Service provider C-01, community dentist).
3.3. Provision of Comprehensive Support
3.3.1. Utilisation of Dental Services
“You know, you have no choice, you know you have to often put your name down, where I live, its centralized system that you can put your name down and then you’ll be allocated a dentist, but it could be somebody on the other side of town to try to keep it local, ‘you know this one’s come up, would you like to register with them?’ and the cost because rather wait another three or four months you are going to say yeah. So then getting across there becomes a problem.” (Service user J-04, with diagnosis of bipolar disorder).
“So the barrier, is the support, if you are unwell how will you be able to get to the appointment? That’s where the barrier is, would there be enough support in order for me to get to the appointment or will I be able to ask questions during the appointment? And if so, will it be with my level of care be affected? (Service user S-01, with diagnosis of schizophrenia).
“Because it’s having access to quality dental care and if it’s costing you 45 quid to go now and a bit of a squirt and clean 45 quid is, you know well that’s Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday’s benefits for me well what shall we not pay? Shall we not pay my rent, shall we not pay my council tax; so I am not going see my kids, yeah; no, I am okay with brown teeth and a bit of plaque. You know you’re asking people to make those sort of choices.” (Service user J-04, with diagnosis of bipolar disorder).
“Making every contact count, it does need to be a conversation and part of you know, a multi-disciplinary team approach, social workers, health workers, mental health workers, GPs. You know it’s a bit like the conversation around making sure people get their physical health checks as part of their severe mental illness and medics, I’ve heard them say it before you know ‘we’re not experts in physical health’, but you know what you, you are my consultant psychiatrist, you are my mental health nurse, you are my social worker, you are whoever, you don’t have to be an expert in the field to put in my CPA letter or my discharge letter or the letter to my GP-when was the last time I saw a dentist or when’s the last time I had a physical health check…you know, to advocate for me and that’s what we need, we need people to support us, we need people to advocate for us.” (Service user K-05, with diagnosis of schizophrenia).
3.3.2. Accessibility and Availability of Services
“Those patients that don’t attend appointments with us, you know they don’t add three hours of our time. So, we are commissioned to deliver those targets, so the practice just you know can’t keep seeing them, you know if they really struggle, unfortunately, to comply with the normal frame of practice in primary care.” (Service provider E-02, High street dentist).
“The majority of people who come in, it isn’t that it was their focus or their priority, but if there were any issues there used to be a facility for a very quick referral to a local dentist and the whole system is not there anymore. But it was an NHS dentist and it was possible to bring them in the morning and have an appointment the same day. And that was focused mainly on people who have mental health problems and I think the benefits of that were people got seen straight away, they didn’t have to think about it and the pressing issues, whatever the tooth ache or whatever contentious was fixed straightaway.” (Service provider- S-08, worked as mental health nurse).
“With the caseloads that people carry at the moment you wouldn’t be able to, mental health staff wouldn’t be able to kind of facilitate supporting someone to get those. So even you had that overview and you have that, I don’t know that awareness you still have not got the resources in terms of staffing to be able to support that. And so you, you just continue hitting that barrier, because the people have just got ridiculous caseloads essentially.” (Service provider M-09, mental health nurse).
“So how do we have those conversations about finding a sweet spot for an individual- right balance so that each profession understands the rationale behind what the other one is doing and we’re not always just butting heads, but we’re actually supporting the patient in the middle.” (Service provider B-10, special care dentist).
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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ID | Participant Group | Age (Years) | Gender | Diagnosis/Profession |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Service user | 31–40 | M | Schizophrenia |
2 | Service user | >60 | F | Schizophrenia |
3 | Service user | 31–40 | F | Schizophrenia |
4 | Service user | 41–50 | M | Schizophrenia |
5 | Service user | 41–50 | M | Bipolar disorder |
6 | Service user | >60 | F | Bipolar disorder |
7 | Service user | 41–50 | F | Bipolar disorder |
8 | Health professional | 31–40 | F | Community service dentist |
9 | Health professional | 31–40 | F | High street dentist |
10 | Health professional | 31–40 | F | Dental hygienist |
11 | Health professional | 31–40 | M | Special care dentist |
12 | Informal Carer | 51–60 | F | Caring for person with schizophrenia |
13 | Health professional | 31–40 | M | Occupational therapist |
14 | Health professional | 31–40 | M | Clinical psychologist |
15 | Health professional | 31–40 | F | Mental health nurse |
16 | Health professional | 41–50 | F | Mental health nurse |
17 | Health professional | 31–40 | M | Special care dentist |
Level- Theme | Perspectives of Service User/Service Provider | Sub-Themes | Categories | Description | Reference to Theme (n) |
Personal level- Amelioration of the problem | Service user | Impact of mental ill-health |
| Problems associated with mental illness | 15 |
Service provider | Having a positive attitude |
| Incorporation of effective communication skills | 3 | |
Service provider | Keeping oral health on the agenda |
| Taking a holistic approach | 15 | |
Inter-personal level-Use of a tailored approach | Service user | Need to be heard and understood |
| Patient involvement in care provision | 27 |
Service provider | Considering individual needs |
| Provision of care proportional to needs | 4 | |
Systems level-Provision of comprehensive support | Service user | Utilisation of dental services |
| Factors affecting service utilisation | 52 |
Service provider | Accessibility and availability of services |
| Consideration for integration of services | 46 |
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Mishu, M.P.; Faisal, M.R.; Macnamara, A.; Sabbah, W.; Peckham, E.; Newbronner, L.; Gilbody, S.; Gega, L. A Qualitative Study Exploring the Barriers and Facilitators for Maintaining Oral Health and Using Dental Service in People with Severe Mental Illness: Perspectives from Service Users and Service Providers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 4344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19074344
Mishu MP, Faisal MR, Macnamara A, Sabbah W, Peckham E, Newbronner L, Gilbody S, Gega L. A Qualitative Study Exploring the Barriers and Facilitators for Maintaining Oral Health and Using Dental Service in People with Severe Mental Illness: Perspectives from Service Users and Service Providers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(7):4344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19074344
Chicago/Turabian StyleMishu, Masuma Pervin, Mehreen Riaz Faisal, Alexandra Macnamara, Wael Sabbah, Emily Peckham, Liz Newbronner, Simon Gilbody, and Lina Gega. 2022. "A Qualitative Study Exploring the Barriers and Facilitators for Maintaining Oral Health and Using Dental Service in People with Severe Mental Illness: Perspectives from Service Users and Service Providers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 7: 4344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19074344
APA StyleMishu, M. P., Faisal, M. R., Macnamara, A., Sabbah, W., Peckham, E., Newbronner, L., Gilbody, S., & Gega, L. (2022). A Qualitative Study Exploring the Barriers and Facilitators for Maintaining Oral Health and Using Dental Service in People with Severe Mental Illness: Perspectives from Service Users and Service Providers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(7), 4344. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19074344