Managing the care of the medically-compromised elderly dentate patient in general practice (SW19-06-12-01)
Availability | Course has taken place | ||
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Subject | Miscellaneous | ||
Description | The course is intended as an overview of the problems facing an increasingly aged dental population. Patients are keeping their teeth longer and are surviving longer due to advances in medical care and medications. With increasing age comes the problems of reducing mobility, poor diet due to low income, dry mouth through polyphamacy, reduction in care due to limitations on home/care home funding and increasing incidance of the many forms of dementia. Dental treatment needs to be aligned with the specific needs of the patient; likewise the clinician is in an ideal posistion to monitor the patient's general health and involve other facets of the care network. Current guidelines sugest simplicity in treatment, an holistic approach, and working from the ground up- working with the family and carers regarding diet and prevention, and with General Medical Practitioners to reduce overprescription and therefore side effects of just about every drug available. This course is suitable for PLVE dentists | ||
Venue | Holiday Inn Filton, Bristol - Bristol & N Somerset View details | ||
Date & time | Wednesday 12 June 2019, 09:00 to 16:30 | ||
Lecturer | Dr James Wise View details | ||
Target audience | Mandatory: Dentist, or Hygienist, or Therapist | ||
Development outcome | A, C | ||
Course style | Lecture | ||
Catering | Meal | ||
Core topic | Not a core topic | ||
CPD hours | 6:00 | ||
Cost | £90.00 | ||
Aims | - To give an overview of the current care system for the elderly. - To help the clinician to work with the team. - Spot common oral pathologies. - Maintain dignity and independence. | ||
Objectives | - How to start with a thorough clinical and needs analysis. - Spotting the diet deficiencies and working with the team- think Diabetes and Urinary Tract Infections being misdiagnosed as Dementia. - Keeping treatment simple and involving the patient and carers. - Awareness of common medical conditions and when to refer. - Awareness that xerostomia is pathological, not a consequence of age. | ||
Learning outcomes | To be able to manage the older patient with increased confidence in general dental practice | ||