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A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness: A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage

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A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness: A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage. / Palmier-Claus, Jasper; Morris, Abigail; French, Paul et al.
In: Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology, 04.08.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Palmier-Claus, J, Morris, A, French, P, Griffiths, R, Aggarwal, V, Berry, K, Gkioni, E, Harris, R, Laverty, L, Lobban, F, Procter, S, Kerry, E, Newens, C, Mupinga, P, Golby, R, Valemis, K, Oakes, L, Fazekas, F, Perry, A, Shiers, D, Hilton, C, Dawber, A, Elliott, E, Lunat, F & Burnside, G 2025, 'A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness: A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage', Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdoe.70002

APA

Palmier-Claus, J., Morris, A., French, P., Griffiths, R., Aggarwal, V., Berry, K., Gkioni, E., Harris, R., Laverty, L., Lobban, F., Procter, S., Kerry, E., Newens, C., Mupinga, P., Golby, R., Valemis, K., Oakes, L., Fazekas, F., Perry, A., ... Burnside, G. (2025). A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness: A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage. Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/cdoe.70002

Vancouver

Palmier-Claus J, Morris A, French P, Griffiths R, Aggarwal V, Berry K et al. A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness: A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage. Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology. 2025 Aug 4. Epub 2025 Aug 4. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.70002

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Bibtex

@article{f29ff3a22e1c4898a791741731875ef6,
title = "A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness: A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage",
abstract = "Objectives: People with severe mental illness experience poor oral health, compared to the general population. They experience inequity in accessing dental services. This randomised controlled trial evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of a link work intervention to support people with severe mental illness to access a routine dental appointment. Methods: This was a feasibility randomised controlled trial across three sites with 1:1 allocation to Treatment as usual (TAU) or TAU plus a link work intervention (ISRCTN13650779; NCT05545228). Participants were adults accessing mental health services who had not attended a routine dental appointment in the past three years. The intervention comprised up to six sessions with a link worker. Participants completed self-report assessments, and an optional dental examination, at baseline and after nine-months. Dental visiting data were obtained through self-report and the NHS Business Services Authority (BSA). Results: 161 participants were referred into the trial, resulting in 79 out of the target 84 randomisations (94.0%) over seven months. There were high levels of engagement with the intervention. Dental visiting data were available for 84.8% of participants (95%CI: 75.3%, 91.1%). Uptake of the optional dental examination within the research assessment battery was low (follow-up: 12.7%; 95%CI: 7.0%, 21.8%). There were no serious adverse events attributable to the intervention or trial procedures. There were substantially higher rates of dental attendance after nine-months in the link work intervention arm, compared to TAU, in both the self-report (91.7% vs 26.7%) and NHS BSA (55.3% vs 12.1%) data. There was also a signal of improved self-reported oral health related quality of life favouring the link work intervention arm. Conclusions: The trial procedures and link work intervention were found to be feasible, acceptable, and safe. The intervention showed promise in terms of clinical outcomes. The effectiveness of the intervention requires evaluation in a larger trial. ",
keywords = "Mental Health, Psychosis, Mood Disorders, Dentistry, Dentists",
author = "Jasper Palmier-Claus and Abigail Morris and Paul French and Robert Griffiths and Vishal Aggarwal and Katherine Berry and Efstathia Gkioni and Rebecca Harris and Louise Laverty and Fiona Lobban and Sarah Procter and Eirian Kerry and Connie Newens and Pauline Mupinga and Rebecca Golby and Kyriakos Valemis and Lucy Oakes and Fanni Fazekas and Antonia Perry and David Shiers and Claire Hilton and Alison Dawber and Emma Elliott and Farah Lunat and Girvan Burnside",
year = "2025",
month = aug,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1111/cdoe.70002",
language = "English",
journal = "Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology",
issn = "0301-5661",
publisher = "Blackwell Munksgaard",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A link work intervention to facilitate dental visiting in people with severe mental illness

T2 - A two-arm, multi-site, assessor blind, randomised feasibility trial with dental record linkage

AU - Palmier-Claus, Jasper

AU - Morris, Abigail

AU - French, Paul

AU - Griffiths, Robert

AU - Aggarwal, Vishal

AU - Berry, Katherine

AU - Gkioni, Efstathia

AU - Harris, Rebecca

AU - Laverty, Louise

AU - Lobban, Fiona

AU - Procter, Sarah

AU - Kerry, Eirian

AU - Newens, Connie

AU - Mupinga, Pauline

AU - Golby, Rebecca

AU - Valemis, Kyriakos

AU - Oakes, Lucy

AU - Fazekas, Fanni

AU - Perry, Antonia

AU - Shiers, David

AU - Hilton, Claire

AU - Dawber, Alison

AU - Elliott, Emma

AU - Lunat, Farah

AU - Burnside, Girvan

PY - 2025/8/4

Y1 - 2025/8/4

N2 - Objectives: People with severe mental illness experience poor oral health, compared to the general population. They experience inequity in accessing dental services. This randomised controlled trial evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of a link work intervention to support people with severe mental illness to access a routine dental appointment. Methods: This was a feasibility randomised controlled trial across three sites with 1:1 allocation to Treatment as usual (TAU) or TAU plus a link work intervention (ISRCTN13650779; NCT05545228). Participants were adults accessing mental health services who had not attended a routine dental appointment in the past three years. The intervention comprised up to six sessions with a link worker. Participants completed self-report assessments, and an optional dental examination, at baseline and after nine-months. Dental visiting data were obtained through self-report and the NHS Business Services Authority (BSA). Results: 161 participants were referred into the trial, resulting in 79 out of the target 84 randomisations (94.0%) over seven months. There were high levels of engagement with the intervention. Dental visiting data were available for 84.8% of participants (95%CI: 75.3%, 91.1%). Uptake of the optional dental examination within the research assessment battery was low (follow-up: 12.7%; 95%CI: 7.0%, 21.8%). There were no serious adverse events attributable to the intervention or trial procedures. There were substantially higher rates of dental attendance after nine-months in the link work intervention arm, compared to TAU, in both the self-report (91.7% vs 26.7%) and NHS BSA (55.3% vs 12.1%) data. There was also a signal of improved self-reported oral health related quality of life favouring the link work intervention arm. Conclusions: The trial procedures and link work intervention were found to be feasible, acceptable, and safe. The intervention showed promise in terms of clinical outcomes. The effectiveness of the intervention requires evaluation in a larger trial.

AB - Objectives: People with severe mental illness experience poor oral health, compared to the general population. They experience inequity in accessing dental services. This randomised controlled trial evaluated the acceptability and feasibility of a link work intervention to support people with severe mental illness to access a routine dental appointment. Methods: This was a feasibility randomised controlled trial across three sites with 1:1 allocation to Treatment as usual (TAU) or TAU plus a link work intervention (ISRCTN13650779; NCT05545228). Participants were adults accessing mental health services who had not attended a routine dental appointment in the past three years. The intervention comprised up to six sessions with a link worker. Participants completed self-report assessments, and an optional dental examination, at baseline and after nine-months. Dental visiting data were obtained through self-report and the NHS Business Services Authority (BSA). Results: 161 participants were referred into the trial, resulting in 79 out of the target 84 randomisations (94.0%) over seven months. There were high levels of engagement with the intervention. Dental visiting data were available for 84.8% of participants (95%CI: 75.3%, 91.1%). Uptake of the optional dental examination within the research assessment battery was low (follow-up: 12.7%; 95%CI: 7.0%, 21.8%). There were no serious adverse events attributable to the intervention or trial procedures. There were substantially higher rates of dental attendance after nine-months in the link work intervention arm, compared to TAU, in both the self-report (91.7% vs 26.7%) and NHS BSA (55.3% vs 12.1%) data. There was also a signal of improved self-reported oral health related quality of life favouring the link work intervention arm. Conclusions: The trial procedures and link work intervention were found to be feasible, acceptable, and safe. The intervention showed promise in terms of clinical outcomes. The effectiveness of the intervention requires evaluation in a larger trial.

KW - Mental Health

KW - Psychosis

KW - Mood Disorders

KW - Dentistry

KW - Dentists

U2 - 10.1111/cdoe.70002

DO - 10.1111/cdoe.70002

M3 - Journal article

JO - Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology

JF - Community Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology

SN - 0301-5661

ER -