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Proposed U.S. dentistry reforms miss the mark
By William T. Brown, DDS, DrBicuspid.com contributing writer

June 26, 2012 -- "Thinking is easy, acting is difficult, and to put one's thoughts into action is the most difficult thing in the world."
— Johan Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)

Discussions about lack of access to dental care for poor, elderly, and rural people have been taking place for years. The back and forth has not provided solutions to the problem.

William T. Brown, DDS

Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) has introduced legislation to solve the problem with a transformation of the delivery of dental care. Sanders and his co-sponsor, Rep. Elijah Cummings (D-MD), say "the groups that need the care most are the least likely to get it."

As chairman of the Senate Subcommittee on Primary Health and Aging, Sanders reports that "130 million Americans have no dental insurance, one-quarter of U.S. adults age 65 or older have no teeth, and 17 million low-income children do not see a dentist in a year."

His answer is to extend comprehensive dental coverage to millions of Medicare, Medicaid, and Department of Veteran Affairs healthcare beneficiaries, combined with expanding a vast network of federally qualified community health centers to territories determined to be deficient.

The one-size-fits-all approach of a federally mandated national network of dental clinics to treat the ravages of disease is a laudable objective. However, it misses the fact that we can realistically prevent the problem.

A better premise

In my opinion, this radical and expensive legislation is based on an obsolete premise; drilling, filling, and pulling have been tried before, and it doesn't work. For example, the U.K.'s National Health Service implemented this model and found that the final solution was pulling everyone's teeth. According to a shocking report in a Bristol newspaper, 11-year-old girls had full-mouth extractions and dentures.

But it isn't necessary to look outside our own borders. The current U.S. Medicaid system for dentistry has people go for extractions because what it covers directs patients to that end.

The question I would ask the senator is, "If your house were on fire, whom would you call first, the firemen or the carpenters?" The obvious answer is the firemen.

The ultimate answer is PREVENTION. The future of all healthcare is self-help, instead of reactionary.

Here is an analogy I use with patients: If you leased an automobile for two or three years, you might change the oil. However, if you were given a car at age 15 and told this would be the only car you could have for the rest of your life, what kind of preventive maintenance would you perform? You would probably change the air in the tires.

Predictable = preventable

Unlike systemic health, dental disease is predictable. Dental science and technology have determined the cause and prevention of decay and periodontal disease. Bacterial plaque initiates dental disease; all other factors merely complicate or contribute to the disease process started by bacterial plaque. Everyone has plaque -- even you. Therefore, disease is developing unless the bacterial plaque is managed daily.

In my experience, patients can be educated to understand their enemy and taught the skills necessary to control caries and periodontal disease, except in unmanageable areas. The education can be conducted on a large scale, not merely one-on-one.

The dental profession must be the leader in educating the American public to control our most common disease. We need to make clear to the public that we are trying to put our profession out of business. This is a different image that has evolved in the past couple of decades. The action of reaching out in a humanitarian manner could go a long way in re-establishing public trust recently suffered by dentistry.

From my 50 years' experience of educating clients from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds, accepting responsibility for their dental disease is a gift that keeps on giving.

What standards must be met?

  • High-quality emergency care given quickly and pleasantly with a minimum of red tape.
  • Aid goes where the needs are greatest rather than where the results are.
  • Recipients, sponsoring agencies, and participating dentists and staff must develop goals and purposes for the program consistent with the wants and needs of the recipients.
  • Dealing with family units to successfully develop a patient's philosophy of dental health and integration of preventive practices into daily life.
  • Develop the family's sense of responsibility for each member's own health.
  • Comprehensive examination and diagnosis by a qualified dentist.
  • Dental disease-control teaching for those who want it. This will include:
    • Long-range disease-control checks to maintain health.
    • Nutritional counseling for rampant caries or periodontal disease.
    • Regular topical fluoride under supervision.

(The list of standards is from Robert Barkley's Successful Preventive Dental Practices, specifically from the chapter "A Philosophy of Indigent Dental Care," plus my additions.)

A national initiative led by the dental profession to address the problems stated by well-meaning legislators could be fruitful on many levels. The most important would be making a major contribution to our contract with society.

A new model for omnibus preventive dental practice could give the dentist a bonus for caries- and periodontal-disease-free patients. What a concept!

The major benefits of the effort will accrue to the public.

William T. Brown, DDS, practices in Des Moines, IA. He started his blog, Dental Intelligence, in 2010 to share information and experiences that have fundamentally changed the way dentistry is practiced.


Copyright © 2012 DrBicuspid.com

Last Updated kk 6/28/2012 9:46:39 AM

10 comments so far ...
6/27/2012 12:03:00 PM
Zellie
It's wonderful to find others feel as I do. There needs to be change. Good dentists need to be reimbursed for their efforts to prevent disease. 
6/27/2012 12:23:59 PM
yohan659
dentists do wish to be compensated adequately to pay overhead;but a greater concern for many dentists is the reliablity of patients to show up for appointments. too many don't show up for appointments multiple times without consequences to them. they don't show courtesy of cancelling. government entities do not assist the dentists to have patients keep appointments. there are a multitude of behavioral problems with patients on governmental assistance. too many feel  entitled
like so many others .  Congresspersons are just responding to loud voices,with disregard to follow-up to make sure there is compliance and adequate compensation for services rendered
 
6/27/2012 3:55:27 PM
SOS-RDH
Yikes, Yohan!
Branding and stereotyping groups of people in need is counterproductive. It's 2012. What evidence do you have "there are a multitude of behavioral problems with patients on governmental assistance", or "too many feel entitled"?
These types of  biased judgements about people make the problem of access to affordable dental care someone else's problem.
Dental disease prevention services should be mandated components of any health care plan. Dental hygienists are trained as prevention specialists, yet organized dentistry spends millions of dollars opposing any legislation to expand a hygienist's scope of practice by allowing them to provide direct access to services.  Many professional and advocacy groups have reached out to the ADA to try to work together to solve this problem; hard working and compassionate legislatiors like Bernie Sanders write legislation that attempts to make dental care available to everyone, yet the dentists want to gut any part of the bill that doesn't have them in control.  We don't have enough dentists to serve everyone.  We need more trained dental professionals, like hygienists and dental therapists, who can focus on prevention and simple procedures. It's not rocket science.
 
6/27/2012 5:10:44 PM
denturist
ADA leadership needs to wake up and free-up the dental hygienists. Give hygienists independence with their own boards in all 50 states; having hygienists in every public health office so all segments of society have the opportunity for a dental exam, cleaning and referral services to oral surgeons, dentists, denturists, dental health aide therapists or other specialists.
 
This would help meet the oral healthcare needs of our society, especially early screenings with possible detection for oral cancer.
6/27/2012 8:02:56 PM
The Dentist's Coach
Bill, very well thought out! Dentistry needs experienced, mature leaders to come together to respond to the needs of the people whom we've been entrusted to care for. We will wait forever as we always have for ADA leadership to step up to the plate; actually, they have enough on their hands, anyway. If the dental profession can come together before people that don't understand the difference between the dental health care model and the medical health care model, we've got a rocky road ahead of us. Dentists, don't be silent on this issue! Although the current proposal likely won't pass, there will be more to come. Yes, things do change, and they need to ... in a thoughtful, meaningful, productive way. Everything can be solved with the right conversation at the right time.
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