Cureus. 2025 Aug 8;17(8):e89604. doi: 10.7759/cureus.89604. eCollection 2025 Aug.
ABSTRACT
Oral health is important for the overall health of an individual, particularly older adults. However, a number of obstacles frequently prevent older people from receiving timely and appropriate dental care. These obstacles are intricate and multifaceted, involving systemic diseases, cognitive elements, and psychological, financial, and educational issues. Dementia and Alzheimer’s disease are examples of cognitive impairments that can make it difficult for an elderly person to seek or cooperate with dental treatment. Additional psychological factors that decrease care-seeking behaviour include anxiety, fear of dental treatments, depression, and a general lack of motivation. Financial constraints are major deterrents, such as low income and no dental insurance. Furthermore, polypharmacy and multimorbidity not only make treatment planning more difficult, but they also deprive oral health of priority. The problem is made worse by systemic healthcare barriers like inadequate referral systems, a lack of geriatric-focused dentists, and poor integration between dental and medical services. Neglect is also exacerbated by older adults’ and their caregivers’ perceived lack of need for dental care. A comprehensive, multidisciplinary strategy is needed to address these issues, one that incorporates training dental professionals in geriatric care, better public health regulations, caregiver education, and the creation of easily accessible, reasonably priced services. Improving the general and oral health of the elderly requires an understanding of and commitment to removing these obstacles.
PMID:40922863 | PMC:PMC12414252 | DOI:10.7759/cureus.89604
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