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Journal Article

Citation

Petti S. Oral Dis. 2018; 24(6): 891-899.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health and Infectious Diseases, Sapienza University, Rome, Italy.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/odi.12797

PMID

29029370

Abstract

Elder Neglect (EN) is the failure of a designated caregiver to meet the needs of a dependent older person. World EN prevalence, meta-analyzed in this study, is 1.0% or 1.8% according to different statistical methods. Referring alleged EN cases to Adult Protective Services (APSs) by healthcare workers (HCWs) is mandatory in many countries. However, only few claims are substantiated, as EN could be confused with Self-Neglect, neglect could be unintentional or due to caregiver unawareness. Screening tools are inaccurate and their use is discouraged by public health organizations, because they lead to too many false positives, which engulf the already overwhelmed APSs. HCWs need effective tools with objective judgements, which do not hamper the HCW-caregiver-patient rapport and prevent lawsuits when allegations are unfounded. Orofacial EN manifestations (poor oral/denture hygiene, lack of needed/improper dentures, dry mouth, skin/mucosal rashes) are essential Forensic Markers of EN. I classified EN-associated oral diseases according to the unmet needs into four groups: 1-Traumatic injuries due to lack of caregiver vigilance (e.g., maxillofacial fractures); 2-Diseases due to oral hygiene deficiency (e.g., root caries); 3-Diseases typical of the elderly with late/no diagnosis (e.g., oral cancer); 4-Diseases typical of the elderly exacerbated by psychological distress (e.g., oral lichen planus). This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Elder neglect; oral and maxillofacial injuries; oral diseases

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