Title: Primary Oral Health Care and Coalition Building
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2Primary Oral Health Care and Coalition Building
3ORAL HEALTH
- Tooth decay
- Gum diseases
- Oral cancer
4Many health problems begin with poor oral hygiene
- By Karen UhlenhuthKnight Ridder Newspapers
- January 4, 2004
5 Dr. Marjorie Jeffcoat,
- Dean of the University of Pennsylvania School of
Dental Medicine - Editor Journal of the American Dental Association
6GUM DISEASEa Chronic Infection
- Increase the risk of heart attack and stroke.
- Increase the incidence of premature,
low-birthweight babies. - Exacerbate diabetes, which now affects 17 million
Americans. - Possibly contribute to grave lung disorders such
as pneumonia and emphysema.
7Gum Disease
- 25 to 35 of people 35 to 60 years old have the
disease - Among people older than 60, that rate escalates
to 60 - 75
8Risk Factors
- Poor dental hygiene. You should brush and floss
daily to maintain healthy gums. - Cigarette smoking. It's been identified as one
of the leading causes of periodontal disease. - Genes. About 30 percent of people have an
inherited susceptibility.
9Risk Factors
- Stress. It interferes with the body's ability to
fight periodontitis and other infections. - Diabetes. Diabetics are more susceptible to all
infections, including those in the mouth. - Some drugs. They include oral contraceptives,
antidepressants and some heart medications
10Gum Disease and Fetal Health
- A pregnant woman with periodontal disease is
more likely than a noninfected woman to give
birth prematurely and to deliver a small baby - In a severe case of periodontitis, she is about
seven times more likely
11Dr. Jeffcoat
- It is time for us not to think of our mouths as
somehow disconnected from the rest of our bodies.
The same blood flows through them, the same
nerves go to them. To have a healthy body, you
need a healthy mouth.
122020 vision What will you be treating in 20
years?
- There will be more older people and their oral
health will be better than previous generations - More and more of our patients will have complex
medical conditions - Marjorie K. Jeffcoat, JADA 134 Dec 2003
13Whats up with tooth decay in the USA
- Caries is a transmissible infection that is diet
dependent and saliva mediated - Caries prevention has been effective with a large
proportion of the population
14Pathogenesis of Dental Caries
- Caries is a transmissible infection
- Mother to child (Berkowitz 1981)
- Window of Infectivity, 12-30 months (Caufield
1989) - 20 of 14 month old infants infected (Mohan 1998)
- Predentate infants infected (Milgrom 1998)
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16Essential Cause of Tooth Decay
- Susceptible tooth
- Bacteria
- Fermentable carbohydrate
- Time
17White Spots
- Subsurface
- demineralization
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22Why do some people get more cavities than others?
- Caries is a transmissible infection that is diet
dependent and saliva mediated - Biofilms, complex communities of microorganisms,
where acid production occurs - All biofilms are not alike
- Joel Berg DDS, MS-Professor Chair of
Pediatric Dentistry, Univ. of Washington,
Scientific American, Feb. 2003, p.93
23Nature of the Problem
- High risk group 25 experience 80 of decay
- Traditional treatment is inaccessible and
expensive - Effective preventive measures are feasible
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26Access to dental care for children in the United
States A survey of general practitioners
- N. Sue Seale, DDS, MSD
- Paul Casamassimo, DDS, MS
- JADA Dec 2003, 1341630-1640
27Results
- The good news!
- 91 of the general dentists treated children
28Results
- The bad news!
- Few children younger than 4 years received
treatment - Children funded by Medicaid were represented in
very low numbers - Few children with high decay rates were treated
29Results
- Only 15 of the respondents identified the age of
1 year as the appropriate age for the first
dental visit - There was a significant association of types of
child patients in practice and with the
intensity of the respondents educational
experiences
30Results
- Practitioners in rural locations were
significantly more likely to treat
Medicaid-covered patients - More than 40 indicated further education in oral
sedation, nitrous oxide sedation and atraumatic
restorative technique
31Petes Conclusions
- General practitioners provide 90 of the dental
care for children - Expansion of access to oral health care by
general dentists for young children,
Medicaid-funded children, and high-risk for decay
children will begin to turn the tide
32The Problem
- Poverty
- Social and cultural isolation
- Fear
- Outdated concepts
33- An Example of Coalition Building
34ABCD Counties 1995-2004
35- Started in Spokane in 1995
- 17 counties currently participating
- gt200,000 children, 5 and under, eligible
36Spokane ABCD
- Begun in 1995 and still going strong
- 43 of children enrolled in the ABCD program
visited a dentist in the past year - 12 of Medicaid-enrolled children not in the ABCD
program visited a dentist in the past year - An ABCD child was 5.3 times more likely to have
had at least one dental visit than a child not
enrolled in the ABCD program - An ABCD child was 6 times more likely to have
received preventive services
37Four Components
- Outreach
- Training and certification of dental
professionals - New and enhanced dental benefits
- Enhanced dental fees
38Reimbursement
- Three fluoride varnish treatments
- Family Oral Hygiene Instruction
- Other new Medicaid procedures
- Enhanced fees
39Qualitative Research Results
- Increased awareness of the need for early
prevention and/or intervention in pre-school
children - The program reduced dental fear and increased
parent satisfaction
40The Efficacy and Cost-Effectiveness of the ABCD
ProgramM. KOBAYSHID. CHI, S. COLDWELL, P.
DOMOTO and P. MILGROMSubmitted
41Results
- Children in ABCD county were healthier than the
non-ABCD county - ABCD expenditures were 33 per child for each
cavity averted - Expenditures for alternatives ranged from 59 to
273
42Conclusions
- ABCD improves the health of preschoolers and has
the potential to save up to 1.3 million per year
in Spokane and Pierce counties alone
43Whatcom County Partnerships
- Mt. Baker District Dental Society
- Whatcom County Health Department
- St. Joseph Hospital
- Opportunity Council
- Madrona Pediatrics
- Interfaith Coalition
- Washington Medicaid/CSO
- Washington Dental Service Foundation
- University of Washington
44Whatcom County Health Department
- Enrolls patients in ABCD
- Sends more infants and toddlers to dentists
- Provides orientation for families
- Assists in problem solving-please call
45Goals
- Establishing a therapeutic alliance with families
- Getting children and parents to return
- Providing continuity of care
46- Reducing the extent of disparities in oral health
- Increasing access to preventive dental care among
preschool children from birth up to 5 years of
age served by the Medicaid program - Joint programs by dentists, health departments
and Medicaid in counties all over the State.
47AAPD Filling Gaps 2001
48Increase in Service to Young Children w/ Medicaid
- Between 2000 and 2002, the number of children
under 6 that were seen by private practice
dentists more than doubled - Children under 2 years of age that were seen
jumped from 10 to 18 - Diane Lowry, MPH, MSW