| Literature DB >> 20423526 |
Andreea Voinea-Griffin1, Jeffrey L Fellows, Donald B Rindal, Andrei Barasch, Gregg H Gilbert, Monika M Safford.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: "Pay for performance" is an incentive system that has been gaining acceptance in medicine and is currently being considered for implementation in dentistry. However, it remains unclear whether pay for performance can effect significant and lasting changes in provider behavior and quality of care. Provider acceptance will likely increase if pay for performance programs reward true quality. Therefore, we adopted a quality-oriented approach in reviewing those factors which could influence whether it will be embraced by the dental profession. DISCUSSION: The factors contributing to the adoption of value-based purchasing were categorized according to the Donabedian quality of care framework. We identified the dental insurance market, the dental profession position, the organization of dental practice, and the dental patient involvement as structural factors influencing the way dental care is practiced and paid for. After considering variations in dental care and the early stage of development for evidence-based dentistry, the scarcity of outcome indicators, lack of clinical markers, inconsistent use of diagnostic codes and scarcity of electronic dental records, we concluded that, for pay for performance programs to be successfully implemented in dentistry, the dental profession and health services researchers should: 1) expand the knowledge base; 2) increase considerably evidence-based clinical guidelines; and 3) create evidence-based performance measures tied to existing clinical practice guidelines.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20423526 PMCID: PMC2880362 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6831-10-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Stomatognathic Clinical Guidelines in the National Guideline Clearinghouse™[81]
| Clinical guidelines directly related to the practice of dentistry | |
|---|---|
| American Dental Association | 2 |
| American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry | 22 |
| American Cleft Palate Craniofacial Association | 1 |
| American Academy of Pediatrics | 1 |
| American Academy of Sleep Apnea | 1 |
| Center for Disease Control | 1 |
| US Preventive Services Task Force | 2 |
| New York State Department of Health | 2 |
| Health Partners | 4 |
| University of Texas at Austin | 1 |
| Non US Government Agencies | 8 |
| Preventive Services | 12 |
| Cancer | 3 |
| Infectious Diseases | 7 |
Dental care evidence reports and recommendations [70,82]
| AHRQ Evidence report | Level of Evidence |
|---|---|
| Effectiveness of Antimicrobial Adjuncts to Scaling and Root Planning Therapy for Periodontitis | Insufficient |
| The USPSTF recommends that primary care clinicians prescribe oral fluoride supplementation at currently recommended doses to preschool children older than 6 months of age whose primary water source is deficient in fluoride. | Fair |
| The USPSTF concludes that the evidence is insufficient to recommend for or against routine risk assessment of preschool children by primary care clinicians for the prevention of dental disease. | Insufficient |
Clinical outcome indicators for pediatric restorative dentistry [79]
| Indicator |
|---|
| Percentage of deciduous teeth extracted (for pathological reasons) within 6 months following pulpotomy treatment, during the time period under study. |
| Percentage of teeth requiring re-treatment (restoration, endodontic or extraction, but not including Pit & Fissure Sealants) within 24 months of the initial fissure sealant treatment. |
| Percentage of teeth requiring repeat fissure sealant treatment within 24 months of the initial fissure sealant treatment. |