| Literature DB >> 26305577 |
Yulia Anopa1, Alex D McMahon2, David I Conway2, Graham E Ball3, Emma McIntosh4, Lorna M D Macpherson2.
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Dental caries is one of the most common diseases of childhood. The aim of this study was to compare the cost of providing the Scotland-wide nursery toothbrushing programme with associated National Health Service (NHS) cost savings from improvements in the dental health of five-year-old children: through avoided dental extractions, fillings and potential treatments for decay.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26305577 PMCID: PMC4549338 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0136211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Unit cost of a filling, 2009 GBP.
| Description | Child number of claims | SDR codes | SDR unit cost | Weighting | Weighted cost |
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| Filling | 78,039 | 4401 | £7.87 | 89.3% | £7.03 |
| Filling (occasional treatment) | 625 | 6001 | £13.98 | 0.7% | £0.10 |
| Preformed metal cap | 4,005 | 4402 and 6002 | £20.69 | 4.6% | £0.95 |
| Vital pulpotomy | 933 | 4403 and 6003 | £8.27 | 1.1% | £0.09 |
| Non vital pulpotomy | 3,744 | 4404 and 6004 | £15.73 | 4.3% | £0.67 |
| Total | 87,346 | 100.0% | |||
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Unit cost of a tooth extraction, 2009 GBP.
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| Extraction of teeth (fee per course of treatment) | 2101 | £7.87 (extraction of 1 tooth) | |
| Additional fee for each visit for extraction, including the first | 2121 | £6.46 | |
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| Assumption: LA was used if a child had one tooth missing / extracted (based on the national dental inspection results). | |||
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| £694.29 in 2011/12; deflated at the rate of 3% per year to 2009/10, this equals | |||
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| Assumption: Ratio of the number of extractions performed using LA to those performed under GA in 4-7-year-old children was 55%: 45% | |||
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| Dental extractions under LA | £14.33 | 55% | £7.93 |
| Dental extractions under GA | £653.26 | 45% | £291.59 |
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| (This cost was later used in the calculation of the cost of a decayed tooth.) | |||
Unit cost of a decayed primary tooth, 2009 GBP.
| Description | Values / Calculations | Sources |
|---|---|---|
| Total No. of primary teeth with decay (followed up until exfoliation or extraction): | 1587 (100.0%) | Levine RS, Pitts NB, Nugent ZJ (2002). The fate of 1,587 unrestored carious primary teeth: a retrospective general dental practice based study from northern England. British dental journal 193(2):99–103. |
| No. of teeth extracted due to pain: | 190 (12.0%) | |
| No. of teeth without pain extracted (under GA, together with the painful teeth): | 178 (11.2%) | |
| No. of teeth filled: | 60 (3.8%) | |
| We re-calculated the number of filled teeth, assuming that some of the non-painful teeth extracted under GA might have been filled instead: | a) The likelihood of a primary decayed tooth being filled = No. of teeth filled / Total No. of primary teeth with decay = 60 / 1587 = 0.038 | Calculations by the authors using the teeth numbers from Levine et al. (2002) |
| b) The “additional” number of primary decayed teeth which might have been filled instead of being extracted (no pain) = Number of carious teeth without pain that were extracted under GA * The likelihood of a tooth being filled = 178 * 0.038 = 7 teeth | ||
| Number of filled teeth used in this analysis: | 60 + 7 = 67 | |
| Total No. of teeth “treated” (filled or extracted) | = extracted teeth (due to pain) + filled teeth = 190 + 67 = 257 | |
| Likelihood of a decayed tooth being “treated” (filled or extracted; in contrast with those decayed teeth that are left untreated until exfoliation) | = Total No. of teeth “treated” (filled or extracted) / Total No. of primary teeth with decay = 257 / 1587 = 0.162 | |
| Likelihood of a decayed tooth being extracted (not including decayed teeth that are left untreated until exfoliation) | = No. of teeth extracted due to pain / Total No. of teeth “treated” = 190 / 257 = 0.74 | |
| Likelihood of a decayed tooth being filled (not including decayed teeth that are left untreated until exfoliation) | = No. of teeth filled / Total No. of teeth “treated” = 67 / 257 = 0.26 | |
| Expected cost of extraction | £299.53 | Unit cost calculated by the authors ( |
| Cost of a filling | £8.84 | Unit cost calculated by the authors ( |
| Expected cost of a “treated” tooth (filled or extracted) | = (Cost of extraction * Likelihood of a decayed tooth being extracted) + (Cost of a filling * Likelihood of a decayed tooth being filled) = £299.53 * 0.74 + £8.84 * 0.26 = £223.95 | |
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| = Expected cost of a treated tooth (filled or extracted) * Likelihood of being “treated” = £223.95 * 0.162 = |
Sensitivity analysis scenarios, 2009 GBP (in bold italic are values that differ from the baseline scenario).
| Costs / Assumptions | Scenario | ||||
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| Baseline | Low GA cost | High GA cost | Low filling cost | Different filled / extracted ‘treated’ teeth ratio | |
| Filled tooth | £8.84 | £8.84 | £8.84 |
| £8.84 |
| Decayed tooth | £36.28 |
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| £36.28 |
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| Tooth extraction under local anaesthetic (LA) | £14.33 | ||||
| Tooth extraction under general anaesthetic (GA) | £653.26 |
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| £653.26 | £653.26 |
| Ratio of filled to extracted ‘treated’ decayed teeth | 26% / 74% |
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* In bold italic are the values that differ from the baseline scenario.
Annual cost of nursery toothbrushing programme in 2011/12 financial year and deflated to 2009/10, by Scottish Health Board.
| Mid-2011 population of all ages in each Health Board | Mid-2011 population of 3-4-year-olds in each Health Board | Health Board code | Cost of nursery toothbrushing programme in 2011/12 | Cost of nursery toothbrushing programme deflated to 2009/10 |
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| Under 28,000 | Under 600 | 1 | £19,881 | £18,706 |
| 2 | £30,011 | £28,237 | ||
| 3 | £31,752 | £29,875 | ||
| 100,000–450,000 | 2,000–9,000 | 4 | £31,932 | £30,045 |
| 5 | £38,166 | £35,910 | ||
| 6 | £41,533 | £39,078 | ||
| 7 | £84,505 | £79,511 | ||
| 8 | £99,318 | £93,448 | ||
| 9 | £101,180 | £95,200 | ||
| 10 | £140,125 | £131,844 | ||
| Over 550,000 | Over 12,000 | 11 | £218,493 | £205,580 |
| 12 | £294,944 | £277,513 | ||
| 13 | £341,845 | £321,642 | ||
| 14 | £399,650 | £376,031 | ||
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* Source: National Records of Scotland (2012), Estimated population by sex, single year of age and administrative area, mid-2011 (http://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/files/statistics/population-estimates/mid-2011/11mype-cahb-table2.xls); accessed 29 May 2015)
** At 3% per year deflation rate.
Estimated number of filled and decayed teeth and number of children with missing teeth in five year old population in Scotland, 1999/00–2009/10.
| Year | Number of filled teeth in 5 y.o. population | Number of decayed teeth in 5 y.o. population | Number of children with missing teeth in 5 y.o. population | |
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| 1 tooth missing | 2 or more teeth missing | |||
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| 19,030 | 107,925 | 1,615 | 6,479 |
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| 17,857 | 113,844 | 1,937 | 7,139 |
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| 15,849 | 97,010 | 1,504 | 5,921 |
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| 12,966 | 76,545 | 1,062 | 4,560 |
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| 11,777 | 63,555 | 1,122 | 4,084 |
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| 10,909 | 57,167 | 776 | 2,837 |
* No national dental inspections of 5 year old children were conducted in 2000/01, 2001/02, 2004/05, 2006/07 and 2008/09. Dental treatment costs for these years were linearly interpolated based on the costs for the years with the dental inspection results available.
Fig 1Costs of actual and anticipated dental treatments in five-year-old children (baseline scenario), cost of nursery toothbrushing programme and d3mft over time—Scotland, by financial year.
d3mft index is the number of obviously decayed, missing (due to decay) and filled teeth per child. The “3” in the d3mft index indicates decay into dentine.
Fig 2Annual cost of nursery toothbrushing programme and costs / expected savings resulting from actual and anticipated dental treatments—in comparison with 2001/02 dental treatment costs.
The figure shows data for Scotland, 2001/02-2009/10 financial year. The whiskers represent costs / expected savings resulting from actual and anticipated dental treatments in the case of a ‘low GA cost’ and ‘high GA cost’ scenarios.
Population of 5 year old / 3–4 year old children, costs and expected savings of dental treatments per 5 year old child, and cost of nursery toothbrushing programme per 3–4 year old child, Scotland, 1999/00–2009/10 financial years.
| Year | Population of 5 y.o. children in Scotland | Total cost of actual and anticipated dental treatments (per 5 y.o. child), £ | Cost of dental extractions (per 5 y.o. child), £ | Anticipated further cost of decayed teeth (per 5 y.o. child), £ | Cost of fillings (per 5 year old child), £ | Costs / Expected savings resulting from actual and anticipated dental treatments (per 5 y.o. child), £ | Population of 3–4 y.o. children in Scotland | Cost of nursery toothbrushing programme (per 3–4 y.o. child in population), £ |
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| 61,399 | 135.83 | 69.31 | 63.77 | 2.74 | |||
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| 59,175 | 144.54 | 74.37 | 67.38 | 2.78 | |||
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| 58,088 | 150.91 | 78.27 | 69.87 | 2.78 |
| 115,506 | 15.26 |
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| 58,624 | 153.17 | 80.03 | 70.45 | 2.69 | 3.64 | 112,387 | 15.68 |
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| 56,803 | 132.90 | 68.47 | 61.96 | 2.47 | -21.43 | 108,812 | 16.20 |
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| 55,929 | 120.11 | 61.54 | 56.29 | 2.28 | -36.63 | 105,891 | 16.65 |
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| 53,553 | 109.91 | 55.91 | 51.86 | 2.14 | -53.79 | 104,355 | 16.89 |
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| 52,843 | 103.89 | 53.73 | 48.09 | 2.07 | -62.00 | 104,464 | 16.87 |
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| 52,093 | 97.78 | 51.52 | 44.26 | 2.00 | -70.50 | 107,394 | 16.41 |
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| 53,135 | 85.90 | 42.80 | 41.21 | 1.89 | -79.08 | 110,095 | 16.01 |
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| 54,812 | 73.62 | 34.02 | 37.84 | 1.76 | -86.31 | 111,688 | 15.78 |
All costs / expected savings are reported in 2009 British pound sterling (GBP, £).
* Source: General Register Office for Scotland / National Records of Scotland (2000–2010), Mid-year estimated population by sex, single year of age and administrative area– 1999–2009 years. Based on the 2001 Scotland’s Census (http://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/statistics-and-data/statistics/statistics-by-theme/population/population-estimates/mid-year-population-estimates/archive); accessed 29 May 2015)
** The positive value is an additional cost per 5 year old child in the population, whereas the negative values are expected savings per 5 year old child, in comparison with the dental treatments costs in the baseline year 2001/02.
*** Our assumption was that the cost of the toothbrushing programme was constant over time. Hence there is little variation in the average cost per 3–4 year old child in the Scottish population over time.
Fig 3Costs of decayed, extracted and filled teeth per 1000 population, by Depcat (Depcat 1 = least deprived, Depcat 7 = most deprived).
Fig 4Sensitivity analysis: total cost of actual and anticipated dental treatments—Scotland, 1999/00-2009/10 financial year.
Total cost of actual and anticipated dental treatments is a sum of calculated annual costs of extractions, filled teeth and anticipated further cost of decayed teeth.