Mental and Oral Health: A Dual Frontier in Healthcare Integration and Prevention

Cureus. 2024 Dec 23;16(12):e76264. doi: 10.7759/cureus.76264. eCollection 2024 Dec.

Abstract

Mental and oral health are interrelated, and problems in one area usually affect the other. This review discusses the complex relationships between oral and mental health, particularly the psychosocial challenges faced by individuals with mental health disorders in maintaining oral hygiene, including stigma, lack of access to care, and financial barriers. It also discusses how psychiatric conditions influence oral health, with regard to issues such as dry mouth, gum disease, and tooth decay, and how poor oral health can aggravate mental well-being. Preventive measures, treatment approaches, and solutions to overcome these barriers are also discussed. Methodological rigor was achieved by systematically searching high-impact journals indexed in PubMed and Google Scholar for peer-reviewed publications published between 2000 and 2024. High-impact journals have a high impact factor and rigorous peer-review standards. Articles that did not undergo peer review, articles published in languages other than English, or those that were not accessible (because access was closed unless key information was available through abstracts or summaries) were excluded. It mentions the relevance of integrating mental health services with oral health services, with a focus on individualized care, interdisciplinary cooperation, and creative strategies to break down systemic barriers, resulting in better health outcomes and lower healthcare costs.

Keywords: dental pain; depression; effects on general health; gum disease; mental health; oral health; preventive care.

Publication types

  • Review