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Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis: qualitative analysis

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Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis: qualitative analysis. / Turner, Elizabeth; Berry, Katherine; Quinlivan, Leah et al.
In: BJPsych Open, Vol. 9, No. 3, e59, 11.05.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Turner, E, Berry, K, Quinlivan, L, Shiers, D, Aggarwal, V & Palmier-Claus, J 2023, 'Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis: qualitative analysis', BJPsych Open, vol. 9, no. 3, e59. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.33

APA

Turner, E., Berry, K., Quinlivan, L., Shiers, D., Aggarwal, V., & Palmier-Claus, J. (2023). Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis: qualitative analysis. BJPsych Open, 9(3), Article e59. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2023.33

Vancouver

Turner E, Berry K, Quinlivan L, Shiers D, Aggarwal V, Palmier-Claus J. Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis: qualitative analysis. BJPsych Open. 2023 May 11;9(3):e59. Epub 2023 Apr 11. doi: 10.1192/bjo.2023.33

Author

Turner, Elizabeth ; Berry, Katherine ; Quinlivan, Leah et al. / Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis : qualitative analysis. In: BJPsych Open. 2023 ; Vol. 9, No. 3.

Bibtex

@article{6658ca84d8dd4cf0b8286873883c69a1,
title = "Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis: qualitative analysis",
abstract = "Background Individuals with psychosis have poor oral health compared with the general population. The interaction between oral health and psychosis is likely to be complex and have important ramifications for improving dental and mental health outcomes. However, this relationship is poorly understood and rarely studied using qualitative methods. Aims To explore patient perspectives on the relationship between oral health and psychosis. Method The authors recruited 19 people with experiences of psychosis from community mental health teams, early intervention in psychosis services, and rehabilitation units. Participants completed a qualitative interview. Transcripts were analysed with reflexive thematic analysis. Results The analysis resulted in three themes: theme 1, psychosis creates barriers to good oral health, including a detachment from reality, the threat of unusual experiences and increased use of substances; theme 2, the effects of poor oral health in psychosis, with ramifications for self-identify and social relationships; and theme 3, systems for psychosis influence oral health, with central roles for formal and informal support networks. Conclusions Psychosis was perceived to affect adherence to oral health self-care behaviours and overall oral health. Poor oral health negatively affected self-identity and social relationships. Clinical implications include a systemic approach to provide early intervention and prevention of the sequelae of dental disease, which lead to tooth loss and impaired oral function and aesthetics, which in turn affect mental health. Participants felt that mental health services play an important role in supporting people with oral health.",
keywords = "Psychiatry and Mental health",
author = "Elizabeth Turner and Katherine Berry and Leah Quinlivan and David Shiers and Vishal Aggarwal and Jasper Palmier-Claus",
year = "2023",
month = may,
day = "11",
doi = "10.1192/bjo.2023.33",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "BJPsych Open",
issn = "2056-4724",
publisher = "Cambridge University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding the relationship between oral health and psychosis

T2 - qualitative analysis

AU - Turner, Elizabeth

AU - Berry, Katherine

AU - Quinlivan, Leah

AU - Shiers, David

AU - Aggarwal, Vishal

AU - Palmier-Claus, Jasper

PY - 2023/5/11

Y1 - 2023/5/11

N2 - Background Individuals with psychosis have poor oral health compared with the general population. The interaction between oral health and psychosis is likely to be complex and have important ramifications for improving dental and mental health outcomes. However, this relationship is poorly understood and rarely studied using qualitative methods. Aims To explore patient perspectives on the relationship between oral health and psychosis. Method The authors recruited 19 people with experiences of psychosis from community mental health teams, early intervention in psychosis services, and rehabilitation units. Participants completed a qualitative interview. Transcripts were analysed with reflexive thematic analysis. Results The analysis resulted in three themes: theme 1, psychosis creates barriers to good oral health, including a detachment from reality, the threat of unusual experiences and increased use of substances; theme 2, the effects of poor oral health in psychosis, with ramifications for self-identify and social relationships; and theme 3, systems for psychosis influence oral health, with central roles for formal and informal support networks. Conclusions Psychosis was perceived to affect adherence to oral health self-care behaviours and overall oral health. Poor oral health negatively affected self-identity and social relationships. Clinical implications include a systemic approach to provide early intervention and prevention of the sequelae of dental disease, which lead to tooth loss and impaired oral function and aesthetics, which in turn affect mental health. Participants felt that mental health services play an important role in supporting people with oral health.

AB - Background Individuals with psychosis have poor oral health compared with the general population. The interaction between oral health and psychosis is likely to be complex and have important ramifications for improving dental and mental health outcomes. However, this relationship is poorly understood and rarely studied using qualitative methods. Aims To explore patient perspectives on the relationship between oral health and psychosis. Method The authors recruited 19 people with experiences of psychosis from community mental health teams, early intervention in psychosis services, and rehabilitation units. Participants completed a qualitative interview. Transcripts were analysed with reflexive thematic analysis. Results The analysis resulted in three themes: theme 1, psychosis creates barriers to good oral health, including a detachment from reality, the threat of unusual experiences and increased use of substances; theme 2, the effects of poor oral health in psychosis, with ramifications for self-identify and social relationships; and theme 3, systems for psychosis influence oral health, with central roles for formal and informal support networks. Conclusions Psychosis was perceived to affect adherence to oral health self-care behaviours and overall oral health. Poor oral health negatively affected self-identity and social relationships. Clinical implications include a systemic approach to provide early intervention and prevention of the sequelae of dental disease, which lead to tooth loss and impaired oral function and aesthetics, which in turn affect mental health. Participants felt that mental health services play an important role in supporting people with oral health.

KW - Psychiatry and Mental health

U2 - 10.1192/bjo.2023.33

DO - 10.1192/bjo.2023.33

M3 - Journal article

VL - 9

JO - BJPsych Open

JF - BJPsych Open

SN - 2056-4724

IS - 3

M1 - e59

ER -