杏吧视频

Skip to main content
photo1

Dental-care instruction by iPad?

HEALTH + WELLNESS | February 1, 2018
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

With increased numbers of baby boomers using technology, 杏吧视频 researchers investigate streamlined, cost-cutting post-treatment advice

Researchers at are exploring whether using technology鈥攔ather than a self-care professional to give patients鈥 follow-up care instructions鈥攎ight be an effective, cost cutting means to streamline patient self-care. The research team evaluated 60 patients, looking at participants鈥 willingness and ability to follow oral hygiene instructions given by computer rather than directly from a health care professional. 鈥淚n health care, we are not only preparing for an influx of elderly patients and a growing global middle-class wanting to improve quality of life, but also trying to keep a lid on the skyrocketing costs of care delivery,鈥 said Leena Palomo, associate professor in the Department of Periodontics, who designed the project. 鈥淭he challenge is how we can help more people who need it and help cut the already high cost of care delivery.鈥 鈥淭his is a new pathway to manage a self-care communication to the expected large numbers of people who need it,鈥 she added. 鈥淭hink about it: your care professional teaches you how to floss, how to brush. You ask questions, you leave. The conversation takes between eight to 10 minutes.鈥 But what if technology could work just as well? There is an opportunity to cut the costs of self-care instruction. On a mobile device, such as an iPad like the researchers used, patients can request more guidance, have instructions repeated or learn more. Dentists could also include follow-ups and daily maintenance in an electronic platform. The researchers divided the study subjects into two groups鈥攖hose either older or younger than 50鈥攖o assess preferences based on age. There were 30 patients in each group. The younger group overwhelmingly preferred the tablet. Then, the surprise: about half of the older group preferred hearing follow-up care instructions face-to-face, while the other half was indifferent about computer-assisted instructions. In other words, the older group not only didn鈥檛 mind using the technology, but felt comfortable with it. 鈥淲e asked, 鈥業s it actually better to do this with technology?鈥欌 Palomo said. 鈥淭he current 50-and-over crowd is as satisfied with technology as with the caregiver.鈥 She said the results could be a big deal for the future of dentistry. The idea makes sense, Palomo said, considering that the number of baby boomers鈥攑eople born between 1946 and 1964鈥攚ill reach an estimated 71 million by 2029, according to . 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to have that caregiver talk, but today鈥檚 50-year-old is tomorrow鈥檚 70-year old,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what gave rise to this testing.鈥 Using a tablet or other devise for giving self-care instructions shows promise for potential applications in other areas of medicine as well, Palomo said, such as self-care for diabetic and chronic-obstructive pulmonary disease patients. The team was comprised of an interprofessional team of researchers from the dental school鈥檚 Periodontics and Community Dentistry departments, and the Frances Payne Bolton School of Nursing. The research warrants further 鈥渟ignificant future investigation,鈥 according to the study, . Follow-up studies to learn more and explore potential applications are in the works.