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RECRUITING
NCT06555029
NA

Oral Health Intervention in Adult Primary Care

Sponsor: Case Western Reserve University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This study is a Stage III cRCT to test the efficacy of multi-level interventions at the practice- and provider-level to address low dental utilization (attendance) among Medicaid-enrolled older adults 55 years or older attending non-urgent primary care visits (PCV) in MetroHealth practice settings. Twelve practices will be randomized into two arms: A) Intervention arm will receive the multi-level intervention that includes: 1. Practice-level: EHR changes to include: ask, advise, assess, and connect (AAAC) strategies; 2. Provider-level: Medical staff (MA, nurse): Training in the AAAC process and complete AAAC for enrolled older adults; Clinicians (physician/nurse practitioner): CSM-based education (didactic), skills training (video training with standardized patients), and view completed AAAC in EHR to deliver core oral health (OH) facts to older adults, reinforce importance of dental visits, and document in EHR that OH facts were delivered. B) Control arm will receive, at the provider-level only (clinicians), non-theory-based information about retaining a healthy mouth using the ADA Mouth Healthy Series and deliver standard OH care for patients. Older Adults will be followed at 12 months and 24 months to determine if the participant had any dental attendance. The primary objective is to test the efficacy of the practice level EHR strategy to ask \[OH risk assessment\], advise \[going to dentist\], assess \[willingness for referral\], and connect \[eReferral, resources\] together with clinician theory-based education to communicate OH facts versus clinician alone (standard oral health care) in increasing dental attendance in primary care settings. The secondary objectives are to assess oral hygiene behavior, Geriatric Oral Health Quality of life, biometric measures (BP, serum cholesterol, blood glucose, hbA1c) abstracted from EHR data, potential mediators and moderators to investigate pathways that affect the primary and secondary outcomes, and assess implementation strategies: adoption, reach, fidelity, and maintenance of providers and practices that affect older adult primary and secondary outcomes. The hypothesis is that medical staff completing the AAAC strategy and clinicians with improved OH knowledge (chronicity, systemic effects) will deliver consistent oral health messaging to older adults at PCVs that will result in increased preventive and restorative dental utilization compared to those providers delivering standard care.

Official title: Multi-Level Interventions to Reduce Oral Health Disparities Among Adults in Primary Care Settings

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

55 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

929

Start Date

2024-09-25

Completion Date

2028-10-30

Last Updated

2025-10-15

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

EHR Changes

Practice-Level: Changes to the Epic EHR system will include the AAAC process to ask 5 oral health questions, advise for dental attendance, assess the type of referral, and connect with referral and resources

BEHAVIORAL

Medical Staff EHR Training, Clinician CSM theory-based didactic education and skills training

Provider-Level: Medical staff to complete EHR training and then deliver the ask, advise, assess, connect (AAAC) strategies to screen, refer, and provide resources for oral health. Clinician will receive Common-Sense Model of Self- Regulation (CSM) and Social Cognitive Theory based education and skills training for the physician/nurse practitioner to communicate core OH facts to the patient and provide reinforcement of the importance of dental visits to overall health. Clinicians will also document the encounter in EHR.

BEHAVIORAL

Standard ADA Oral Health Training

Provider-Level: Clinician only: Clinicians will receive standard American Dental Association (ADA) based oral health hygiene training (brushing, flossing, fluoridated water, cleaning dentures) and asked to follow their current oral health care with their patients. The usual care currently is to address oral health issues if the patient complains or has a question. The clinicians will not have skills training nor visual resources for the patient encounter.

Locations (1)

Case Western Reserve University

Cleveland, Ohio, United States