| Literature DB >> 29448934 |
Hermina Harnagea1, Lise Lamothe1, Yves Couturier2, Shahrokh Esfandiari3, René Voyer4, Anne Charbonneau4, Elham Emami5,6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite its importance, the integration of oral health into primary care is still an emerging practice in the field of health care services. This scoping review aims to map the literature and provide a summary on the conceptual frameworks, policies and programs related to this concept.Entities:
Keywords: Integration; Oral health; Primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29448934 PMCID: PMC5815219 DOI: 10.1186/s12903-018-0484-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Oral Health ISSN: 1472-6831 Impact factor: 2.757
Fig. 1Strategies for integration of oral health into primary care based on the Valentijn et al. integration framework
Integration of oral health into primary care: Summary of integrated oral health care programmes
| Authors, Country/ Year | Program type/Target population | Program main strategy | Oral health care provider | Main outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bain & Goldthorpe, Canada/1972 | University-initiated outreach /Aboriginal community | • Assigned full-time dentists to community’s hospital, providing dental services in nursing stations and satellites | Dentists & dental residents | • Creation of supportive environment |
| Rozier et al., USA/2003 | Statewide community clinics preventive program/Low income children 0–3 years old | • Reimbursement of non-dental care providers for preventive dental services | Paediatricians, family physicians, nurses and other health care professionals in community clinics | • ↑ trained medical professionals (88% participation rate) |
| Wysen et al., USA/ 2004 | Public-health based program /Low-income children ≤5 years old | • Empowering case management model | Case managers, community agency staff, physicians, public health nurses, dentists and dental hygienists | • Successful training of community care providers |
| Heuer, S., USA/2007 | School-linked clinics /Low income children | • Contractual partnership with a local community dental health center and employment of dental hygienists at school | Nurse practitioners and dental hygienists | • ↑ Parents’ satisfaction |
| Stevens et al., USA/2007 | Oral health-oriented prenatal practice /Pregnant low income adolescents | • Incorporation of evidence-based oral health guidelines in prenatal care | Nurse midwives and nurse practitioners, paediatric dental consultant, obstetrician, physician, social worker and nutritional specialist | • ↑ Patients’ satisfaction |
| Dugdill, L. & | Global multi-objective public-health programs in collaboration with National Dental Associations, the member associations of Federal Dental International (FDI) and Unilever Oral Care/Wide-range population groups | • Public-private partnership | Non-dental care providers | • Raised awareness of oral health in 1 million people from 36 countries |
| Brownlee, B., USA/2012 | Patient-centered dental homes targeting various models of care: physician led model, administration-driven model, culture of integration, interprofessional collaboration, dental outreach coordinator/Low income children, pregnant women and diabetic patients | • Co-location of dental and medical care | Primary health care providers & clinical assistants | • ↓ oral health risk factors for some of the models including |
| Ramos-Gomez, FJ., USA/2014 | University initiated program in partnership with community-based organizations | • Training of all staff involved | Non-dental providers and dental residents | • 672 patients and 1500 visits over a 3 year period |
| Leavitt Partners, USA/2015 | Dental services integrated in accountable care organizations/ Public & private-insured population groups | • Co-location of medical and dental care | Dentists, care coordinators, non-dental care providers, outreach and referral team | • ↓ 55% of operating room utilization for children’s dental care under sedation |
| Wooley, S., Australia/ 2016 | Community-controlled primary health care service /Aboriginal population | • Care coordination to enable two-way referrals and information exchange between staff and community | Dentist and dental consultant, nurses | • Fissure sealants and fluoride varnish to 100% of the children over a five- year period |
Integration of oral health into primary care: Summary of oral health outcomes
| Author, Year/Country | Study objective/Study design | Setting/Target health care users | Data collection | Indicators | Main outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haughney et al. | To develop and evaluate a model of integrated medical and dental care/Cohort study | Co-located medical and dental practices under National Health System regulation/General population | • Postal questionnaire | • Number of registered joint patients | • 90% increase in the number of registered joint patients over a 3-year period |
| Pronych et al., | To examine the efficacy of systems approach and training nursing staff on the oral health of nursing home residents/Pilot study | Long-term care facilities (LTC)/Geriatric population | • Clinical examination | • Simplified debris index (DI-S) of residents at baseline, 2, 6 and 12 month follow-up | • Statistically significant improvement in the oral hygiene of LTC residents |
| Dyson et al., | To examine the cost-effectiveness of a rural and remote networked hub-and-spokes model / Retrospective economic analysis | Fixed dental services embedded in Aboriginal Health Services/Aboriginal communities | • Services activities data | • Cost-to-value ratio | • Cost-to-value ratio average: 1.61 |
| Gerritsen et al., 2013/ | To compare the cost and effects of integrated care versus incidental care/Observational study | Long-term care facilities/Geriatric population | • Clinical examination | • Oral health status | • Integrated care ↓ dental treatment needs |
| Hom et al., 2013/USA | To evaluate the adherence to early and periodic screening, diagnosis and treatment guidelines for medical practices/ | Medical practices/Medicaid registered children | • Medicaid administrative data base | • Number of states adhering to the best oral health practices | • 88% of states adhered to the content and timing of best oral health practices |
| Kranz et al., 2014/USA | To examine the association between the type of the service provider (primary care provider/PCP, dentist) and subsequent dental-caries related treatment (CRT) and CRT payment/Retrospective study | North Carolina Medicaid / Children aged 3–5 years | • Medicaid enrollment and claim files from 2000 to 2006 | • CRT | • Statistically significant difference among children visiting PCPs, dentist or both in regard to CRT and CRT payments |
| Langelier et al., 2015/USA | To identify effective approaches to integrating primary care and oral health services delivery /Case studies | Federally qualified health care centers across United States /Vulnerable population groups | • Interviews and focus group discussion | • Number of dental clinics | • ↑ number of dental clinics |
| Grisanti et al., 2015/USA | To examine the performance of Federally Qualified Health Centers over 5-year period (2007–2012)/ | Community health center’s dental department /Medicaid, uninsured and privately insured patients | • Administrative records | • Oral health age-specific indicators: number of dental visits, number of received oral health services/year, number of received preventive interventions/year, percentage of preventive measures, number/percentage of preventive visits | • 87% ↑ in the total number of patients who received at least one dental visit over 5-year period |
| DiMarco et al., 2016/USA | To test the feasibility of integrating primary preventive interventions into the practice of nurses, registered dieticians and students | Sites of the Supplemental Nutrition Program for women, children and infants/Low income preschool children | • Dental screening and administrative records | • Number of preventive fluoride varnishes and education sessions | • Fluoride varnish applied to 40% of children in order to reduce the number of cavities by 25% |
Fig. 2Flowchart of the scoping review