Title: The Whole Tooth
1The Whole Tooth Nothing But The Truth
- Presented to you by
- The Ontario Oral Health Alliance
2The Whole Truth
- Presented to you
- _________________
- Insert your coalition here
3Ontario Oral Health Alliance
- Geographic groups
- Hastings
- Prince Edward
- Kingston
- Northumberland
- Ottawa
- Peterborough
- Toronto
- Haliburton
- Lennox Addington
- Halton
-
- Organizations
- VON
- Public Health Units
- Community Health Centers
- Long Term Care Homes
- Social Services
- Ontario Association for Public Health Dentistry
- Dental Professionals
- General Public
4Oral Health Defined
- A state of the oral and related tissues and
structures that contributes positively to
physical, mental and social well-being and the
enjoyment of lifes possibilities, by allowing
the individual to speak, eat and socialize
unhindered by pain, discomfort or embarrassment.
- Canadian Dental Association httpwww.cda-adc.ca
5Our Vision
- A system that allows for equitable
- dental care for all Ontarians
6Our Collective Mission
- To advocate for a continuum
- of oral health for everyone
- Oral Health Promotion
- Disease Prevention
- Timely Access to Care
7Strategic Actions
- Creating awareness
- Educating general public
- Providing limited interim access to services
(band-aid solution) - Influencing government policy to improve access
to services
8Todays Objective
9The Mouth is part of the Body!
10Inequities exist in our system
11Improving access to oral care is a priority!
12Background Information
- One third of residents of Ontario DO NOT see a
dentist on a regular basis (Matear D, Locker D.
Oral disorders, systemic health, well-being and
the quality of life. Community Dental Health
Services Research Unit. Faculty of Dentistry,
University of Toronto 2000) - Barriers exist that prevent many people in our
communities from accessing dental care - Cost is the most common serious barrier
13Inverse Care Law
- Individuals with the greatest need for
- services will be those with the least
- ability to pay for services.
- Webb E. Children and the inverse care law. BMJ
1998 3161588-1591.
14Inequalities in Oral Care
- 52 of Canadians and 60 of Ontarians have
- some form of dental insurance
- BUT
- Not all insurance plans are created equal
- Matear D, Locker D. 2000
15What Is Available For Ontarios Children?
16Dental Care for Children
- Children (up to age 13) from low-income
families - Urgent dental treatment (Health Unit)
- Children (up to age 18) who are dependents of
Ontario Works or Ontario Disability Support
Program recipients - Basic dental treatment
17What Is Available For Ontarios Adults?
18Dental Services for Adults
- General Public
- No government program is available
- Ontario Disability Support Program recipients
- Basic care
- Ontario Works recipients
- Discretionary coverage only that may include
- Emergency care
- Preventive care (expectant mothers)
-
19A Serious Gap Exists for
- Adults Families earning minimum wage (including
those with partial insurance) - Older Adults
20The problem
- Unresolved dental issues lead to a host of
problems - Physical
- Psychological
- Social
- Economic
21Affects Everyone
- Children Youth
- Adults
- Older adults
22Affect On A Child
- Pain infection
- A failure to thrive (Matear D, Locker D. 2000)
- Negative impact on healthy development
readiness to learn - Long term impact on school success success in
life!
23Early Childhood Tooth Decay Graphic used with
permission from the Halton Region Health Unit
24For Want of a Dentist
- Twelve-year-old Deamonte Driver died of a
toothache ... - a routine, 80 tooth extraction might have saved
himWashington Post, Wed Feb 28, 2007
25An Adults Story
- Jason Jones
- A mouthful of decayed teeth
- Unable to eat solid foods and
- Unable to find employment
26Toronto Star, Feb 10, 2007
27Case Study Of An Older Adult
- Maureens story
- Fixed income
- Problems chewing (eating properly) and
socializing - General health compromised
28Gum Disease
29The Lack of Access to Oral Treatment Care
An Economic Burden on Ontarios Society
30A clear Need For Action
- Its expensive.
- But its expensive not to do it
- As stated by Minister Meilleur, Ontario Minister
of Community and Social Services (February 11,
2007, Toronto Star)
31Whats Being Done Now?
32Some Examples
- Chief Dental Officer of Health (i.e. National
Survey) - Coalitions partnerships
- Probono work (cannot rely on volunteers to fix
the problem)
33The Toronto Star War on Poverty Series (2007)
- Why is he out of work Feb 10
- Readers respond to a mans plight Feb 11
- Man amazed by dental care offers Feb 13
- Price tag to fix smiles 2M Feb 22
- Health minister silent on dental care Feb 23
- Plunged into darkness April 28
- He has a new smile system still in decay
- June 23
34Toronto Star Headlines continued
- Dental care should be an election issue, says
coalition July 3 - NDP set to unveil 100M dental program July 10
- Dental care turns into a hot vote issue July 11
- Liberals trump NDP dental announcement July 10
- Liberals vow 45M for low-income dental plan
- Sept 5
- Poor to get dental plan Nov 27
35Ontario Government Investment
- Investment of 135 million
- over three years for a
- Dental Program for
- low-income persons
36Recommendations to Government
37Ultimate Goal
- Equitable access to oral care
- for all Ontarians
38Small Steps Forward
- Ontario Government funding
- is a critical first step forward
-
39Equitable Dental Care for All
- All Ontarians should have FAIR EQUITABLE access
to PREVENTIVE DENTAL CARE BASIC DENTAL
TREATMENT
40Equitable Compensation
- FAIR EQUITABLE compensation for dentists must
be addressed to facilitate FAIR EQUITABLE
access to services
41OOHAs recommendations
- Ensure ALL children have access to a basic dental
program - Offer basic dental services to priority groups
one at a time - Pregnant women
- Low income individuals, seniors and families
- Include coverage for children whose families
have partial - insurance but are unable to pay the uninsured
portion
42Alternate Models of Service Delivery
- Include primary oral health care services within
Ontario - Community Health Centres
- (existing and soon to be established)
43Continued action from all levels of
government is NECESSARYto guarantee a BASIC
level of oral health for ALL Ontarians.
44The Ontario Oral Health AlliancePartners Shaping
the Smiles of Ontario Everyone Has The Right
To A Healthy Smile