The gums category had significant moderate correlation and percent agreement.
Validity analyses of the OHAT categories and examination findings showed complete agreement for the lips category, with the natural teeth, dentures, and tongue categories having high significant correlations and percent agreements. Intraclass correlation coefficients for OHAT total scores were 0.78 for intra-carer and 0.74 for inter-carer reliability. Inter-carer reliability for OHAT categories: percent agreement ranged from 72.6 per cent for oral cleanliness to 92.6 per cent for dental pain Kappa statistics were in moderate range (0.48-0.60) for lips, tongue, gums, saliva, oral cleanliness, and for all other categories in range of 0.61-0.80 (substantial agreement) (p < 0.05). Intra-carer reliability for OHAT categories: percent agreement ranged from 74.4 per cent for oral cleanliness, to 93.9 per cent for dental pain Kappa statistics were in moderate range (0.51-0.60) for lips, saliva, oral cleanliness, and for all other categories in range of 0.61-0.80 (substantial agreement) (p < 0.05). This analysis presents OHAT reliability and validity results.Ī convenience sample of 21 residential care facilities (RCFs) in urban and rural Victoria, NSW and South Australia used the OHAT at baseline, three-months and six-months to assess intra- and inter-carer reliability and concurrent validity.įour hundred and fifty five residents completed all study phases. The OHAT provided institutional carers with a simple, eight category screening tool to assess residents' oral health, including those with dementia. While it doesn't stand out in terms of appearance, it provides users with a high degree of flexibility (via multiple recording modes), and enough customization options, and a few little extra features.The Oral Health Assessment Tool (OHAT) was a component of the Best Practice Oral Health Model for Australian Residential Care study. VokoscreenNG is one of those apps that offers way more than most people think. Other noteworthy features include a magnify overlay, the ability to add a borderless webcam window on screen, a countdown timer (for starting the recording process), status bar integration, and a timed recording option. This makes the app very good for a broad range of users, including absolute beginners. When it comes to supported codecs, we can list Vorbis, Flac, Opus, and MP3.Īnother highlight is the fact that this app features tooltips/helptips for pretty much any feature (via right-sided buttons). It supports MKV, MP4, WEBM, AVI, and MOV containers, as well as x264 and vp8 video codecs. The app allows you to record the entire desktop, or just the active window, or a selected area of your choice.
However, before we list them, here's are the basic stats.
#SCREEN KING TOOL SERIES#
It may not be anything worth writing home in the looks department, but vokoscreenNG packs a series amount of useful tools. Is vokoscreenNG just a humdrum screen recorder?
#SCREEN KING TOOL INSTALL#
It can be installed on Deban (sudo apt install vokoscreen-ng), Fedora (sudo dnf install vokoscreenNG), openSUSE (sudo zypper install vokoscreenNG), Ubuntu (sudo apt install vokoscreen-ng), Arch Linux (sudo pacman -S vokoscreen), and NixOS (nix-env -iA nixos.vokoscreen-ng), and pretty much any Linux distro with access to Snapcraft.
#SCREEN KING TOOL WINDOWS#
The app works on Windows and X11-based Linux distributions (an experimental version with Wayland support is currently in the works).
In short, vokoscreenNG is a modern replacement for the vokoscreen app, both developed by Volker Kohaupt.Įven though they both look pretty much the same, the main difference between them is that while vokoscreen uses ffmpeg as its base, vokoscreenNG is based on GStreamer and Qt and has been rewritten from the ground up. The NG part from its name stands for New Generation. VokoscreenNG is one such app, a feature-packed screencast creator/screen recorder app that allows you to capture the activity on your computer's screen, or an area of said screen. For most OSes, finding a good app of this sort is not a problem, but when it comes to Linux (and the diversity of desktop environments), this may not be as straightforward. In this day and age, a screen recorder is pretty much essential for some educational video or tutorial creators.