Skip to main content
. 2016 Sep 30;2016(9):CD010535. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD010535.pub2

De Visschere 2012.

Methods Cluster‐randomised controlled trial, 2 arms
Study period: spring to winter 2009
Planned follow‐up period: 6 months
Participants Country: Belgium (Flanders)
Setting: 12 nursing homes (with somatic and psychogeriatric residents)
Target audience for the intervention: nursing home staff
Number of randomised participants (nursing home residents; nursing staff): 373; 760
Number of analysed participants (nursing home residents; nursing staff): 297; 259
Age, mean, years (SD): 84.5 (8.5) in IG, 84.9 (7.6) in CG
Female: 68.4% in IG, 78.0% in CG
Edentulous residents: 55% in IG, 54.3% in CG
Residents with dental prosthesis: 72.3% in IG, 69.1% in CG
Inclusion criteria: having teeth and/or (removable) partial or complete dentures; physically suitable for examination; expected to be residing in the care home during the entire 6‐month period
Exclusion criteria: residents in day care, in short‐term residency, in coma, in palliative care or terminally ill, using a denture adhesive, expressing verbal or physical resistiveness before or during an oral examination
Interventions Intervention group
Supervised implementation of the "Oral health care Guideline for Older people in Long‐term care Institutions (OGOLI)" including multiple components:
Education/skills training:
  • oral presentation (1.5 hours) for the managing director, care home study supervisor, the ward heads, and the ward oral healthcare organiser (WOO) about OGOLI, daily oral healthcare protocol, and the supervised implementation project

  • lecture (2 hours) for the WOOs including theoretical and practical essentials of OGOLI and the daily oral healthcare protocol

  • practical education (1 hour) for the WOOs according to the train‐the‐trainer concept

  • theoretical and practical education session (1.5 hour) for all nurses and nurse assistants at ward level, presented by the ward’s WOO using all education materials. WOOs presented a summary of OGOLI and all executive actions (e.g. tooth brushing) were taught and demonstrated with ward residents on site


Information material:
  • PowerPoint presentation, OGOLI, daily oral healthcare protocol


Additional components:
  • WOO encouraged and assisted nursing staff in the daily delivery of oral health care

  • monitoring visits of a dental hygienist together with an investigator (every 6 weeks including WOOs support and where necessary repeating educational sessions for (new) nursing staff)

  • daily oral healthcare protocol


Control group
Usual oral health care according to the no‐supervised implemented guideline (since 2007 Dutch guideline OGOLI)
The intervention was implemented in the control nursing homes after completion of data collection.
Co‐interventions (for the intervention group)
  • oral healthcare material and products

Outcomes Primary outcomes
Oral hygiene measures were assessed at baseline and 6 months after the start of the study.

Oral health‐related knowledge and attitude were assessed at baseline and 6 months after the start of the study.
  • (nursing staff) knowledge: self administered questionnaire (15 statements assessing knowledge of oral pathology and oral hygiene)

  • (nursing staff) attitude: self administered questionnaire (4 statements)

Funding Research project is funded by Open Ankh, Soest and Stichting De Opbouw, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Oral healthcare products were provided free by GABA International, Eureka Pharma Belgium, Oral‐B Belgium, and Johnson & Johnson consumer S.A/N.V.
Notes Questionnaire (included 3 parts: personal items, attitude statements, knowledge statements):
The reliability of the attitude part of the questionnaire was measured by a test–retest procedure in a comparable nursing home not involved in the study. Content and construct validity (knowledge part) was assessed by experts in the field of gerodontology including 1 dental hygienist and 3 dentists.
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk Quote: "randomly allocated to the intervention (n = 6) or the control group (n = 6) using computer‐aided tools"
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Unclear risk Insufficient information
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk No blinding of participants and personnel or incomplete blinding, but the review authors judge that the assessed outcomes are not likely to be influenced by lack of blinding.
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk Quote: "The examiners were masked, they did not know whether a nursing home was allocated to the intervention or the control group."
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) 
 All outcomes Low risk Quote (De Visschere, clinical measures of nursing home residents): "main reasons for loss to follow‐up: death (35%), administrative errors (30%), address change, move or absence (15%), hospitalisation or sickness (9%) or refusals (9%). There were no differences in loss to follow‐up between those randomised to the intervention group and to the control group."
Quote (Janssens, knowledge of nursing staff): baseline N = 760; "259 (34%) respondents were found, 165 belonging to the intervention group and 94 to the control group."
"All respondents were analysed in the groups to which they were originally allocated (intention to treat analysis). There were no significant differences between the respondents (n = 259) and non‐respondents (n = 392) for the explanatory and outcome variables."
Selective reporting (reporting bias) High risk Outcomes reported as planned in the study protocol. Tongue coating as outcome not preplanned.
Other bias Low risk None apparent