Literature DB >> 31146760

A dental workforce strategy to make Australian public dental services more efficient.

Tan Minh Nguyen1,2,3,4, Utsana Tonmukayakul5, Hanny Calache5,6,7,8.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Dental services can be provided by the oral health therapy (OHT) workforce and dentists. This study aims to quantify the potential cost-savings of increased utilisation of the OHT workforce in providing dental services for children under the Child Dental Benefits Schedule (CDBS). The CDBS is an Australian federal government initiative to increase dental care access for children aged 2-17 years.
METHODS: Dental services billed under the CDBS for the 2013-2014 financial year were used. Two OHT-to-dentist workforce mix ratios were tested: Model A National Workforce (1:4) and Model B Victorian Workforce (2:3). The 30% average salary difference between the two professions in the public sector was used to adjust the CDBS fee schedule for each type of service. The current 29% utilisation rate of the CDBS and the government target of 80% were modelled.
RESULTS: The estimated cost-savings under the current CDBS utilisation rate was AUD 26.5M and AUD 61.7M, for Models A and B, respectively. For the government target CDBS utilisation rate, AUD 73.2M for Model A and AUD 170.2M for Model B could be saved.
CONCLUSION: An increased utilisation of the OHT workforce to provide dental services under the CDBS would save costs on public dental service funding. The potential cost-savings can be reinvested in other dental initiatives such as outreach school-based dental check programmes or resource allocation to eliminate adult dental waiting lists in the public sector.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Child health; Health economics; Health policy; Health sector reform; Health systems research; Health workers; National health service; Oral health; Public policy; Public/private

Year:  2019        PMID: 31146760      PMCID: PMC6543641          DOI: 10.1186/s12960-019-0370-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Resour Health        ISSN: 1478-4491


Key messages

The costs to fund dental care under a universal healthcare system are expensive. Current Australian dental workforce models, which predominately rely on dentists to provide dental care, are inefficient to provide public dental services. Countries that are considering to embed dental services via universal healthcare systems should maximise the role of oral health therapists to provide more efficient public dental services.

Introduction

Oral diseases remain one of the most prevalent non-communicable chronic diseases that affect 90% of the world’s population. Common oral diseases such as dental caries and periodontal disease share common risk factors with systemic diseases [1]. In Australia, oral conditions are the second most common cause of acute potentially preventable hospitalisations (PPH). Dental caries is the 10th most common cause of non-fatal burden of disease in Australia, totalling 71 889 years lived with disability [2]. In the State of Victoria, Australia, about 64% of oral conditions related to acute PPH were directly attributed to dental caries [3]. In 2015–2016, there were 67 266 PPH admissions for oral conditions [4]. PPH is defined as ‘admissions that are potentially avoidable through timely and accessible, primary healthcare’. Globally, this measure is considered to be a ‘high-level’ health system performance indicator [5]. In 2016, the average cost of hospital in-patient episode of care for dental extractions and restorations was AUD 3041 [6]. Nationally, AUD 205M could potentially be saved if PPH admissions due to oral conditions could be averted [4]. The Australian health expenditure in 2014–2015 on oral health reached AUD 9.6B. Only 23.8% of this expenditure was contributed by government funding [7]. The goal to establish universal access to public dental care is often the topic of government debates [8]. Australian public dental services have traditionally been the responsibility of the state/territory governments. Two federal dental programmes, the Chronic Disease Dental Scheme (CDDS; 2007–2012) and the Medicare Teen Dental Plan (MTDP; 2008–2013), were previously introduced and implemented to address population inequalities on access to dental services. Evaluations of these programmes, however, have shown that (1) the CDDS was not cost-effective [9] and poorly utilised in rural and remote areas [10] and (2) the MTDP had low utilisation rates (highest rate recorded at 29%) by eligible teenagers [11, 12] despite most claims have no out-of-pocket expenses. Reasons for low utilisation of both programmes, particularly in the rural and remote areas where the inequality is more prominent, remain unknown. The focus on dental services for children has since expanded to include children aged 2–17 years. This new scheme was branded the Child Dental Benefits Schedule (CDBS) in 2014 [13]. Under the CDBS, eligible children can claim up to AUD 1000 of dental benefits over 2 years. The CDBS included a wide range of dental treatment services such as restorations (fillings), removal of teeth and root canal treatment, which was not included in the MTDP. Two reviews of the CDBS share similar concerns to the MTDP, that is, regarding low utilisation rates [13, 14]. The current rate at 29% falls short of the government target of 80% [13]. There is evidence that the Australian healthcare system is not achieving optimal oral health outcomes for children aged 0–12 years [15]. Currently, 29% of children aged 5–6 have never visited a dental practitioner, and 26% of dental caries remain untreated in that population group [16]. The dental workforce in Australia consists of a range of dental practitioners that include dentists, dental specialists, dental hygienists (DH), dental therapists (DT), oral health therapists (OHT) and dental prosthetists. Dentists and dental specialists provide comprehensive dental services under the definition of dentistry. The scope of practice of dentists and dental specialists covers complex dental procedures such as root canal treatment, surgical removal of teeth and fabricating fixed dental prosthesis (dental implants, cast crowns and dental bridge work). DH, DT and OHT, which make up the oral health therapy workforce, have a more narrow scope of practice and are focused on prevention. Their scope of practice is limited to routine dental examinations, preventive procedures, the placement of non-complex restorations (fillings) and non-surgical periodontal treatment (removal of plaque and calculus from teeth). In general, dentists and the oral health therapy workforce manage the two most common oral diseases, dental caries and periodontal disease, at various levels of complexity. The length of training for dentists is between 5 and 7 years (5-year bachelor degree or 3-year bachelor degree combined with a 4-year postgraduate degree) compared to 3-year bachelor degree for OHT. OHT have combined skillsets of DH and DT. Traditionally, DH and DT qualifications were either a 2-year certificate or a 2-year diploma. However, DT training programmes no longer exist in Australia due to the emergence of training dual-qualified OHT [17, 18]. Dental services provided to children have been the historical legacy of the DT role in addressing children’s unmet dental needs [19]. The New Zealand model for utilising DT in school-based services started in 1921 and has rapidly spread to 54 other countries including Australia [20]. Several government reports identified the importance to better utilise the OHT workforce to their full scope of practice [21-23]. One possible reason for low utilisation rates of the MTDP and CDBS dental programmes may be due to an existing inefficient dental workforce model. In this paper, DH, DT and OHT are collectively referred to as the OHT workforce unless otherwise explicitly stated. Under the current workforce skill mix ratio, there is a reliance on the ‘over-qualified’ dentist workforce to provide less complex dental services. Nationally, the dental workforce comprises of 21% of OHT and 79% for dentists [24], an OHT-to-dentist workforce skill mix ratio of 1:4. In the dental public sector in Victoria, dentists account for 61% of the dental workforce, an OHT-to-dentist workforce skill mix ratio of 2:3. Dentists, the most expensive member of the dental team [22], have been the primary providers for the CDDS, MTDP and CDBS. Therefore, this study aims to quantify the potential cost-savings of a hypothetical increased utilisation of the OHT workforce for providing dental services via the CDBS dental programme.

Methods

De-identifiable data used in the present study are publicly available. Therefore, ethics approval was not required. This research was performed according to principles from the Declaration of Helsinki.

Data source

Data on dental services billed under the CDBS for the 2014–2015 year was retrieved electronically and publicly available [25]. However, the data does not provide information as to who provided the service. Dental providers were identified by using two OHT-to-dentist workforce skill mix ratios and applying a salary difference between the two dental professions to adjust the total CDBS claims for each ratio.

Salary difference

The average salary difference between OHT and dentist employed in the public sector was used from eight state and territory jurisdictions (Table 1). The ‘on-cost’ of employment was not used because it is proportionally different and would not affect the average salary difference. The estimated salary difference is 30%, which means the OHT workforce would earn 30% less than dentists for dental services within their scope of practice (Table 2 and Appendix).
Table 1

The 2013/2014 salary differential between OHT and dentists employed in the public sector, by state and territory in Australia

State/territorySalary difference (%)
Australian Capital Territory [57]15.6
New South Wales [58, 59]29.8
Northern Territory [60, 61]20.0
Queensland [62]35.6
South Australia [63]41.0
Tasmania [64, 65]48.3
Victoria [66, 67]16.0
Western Australia [68, 69]33.8
Mean salary differential30.0
Table 2

Summary of dental treatment services that can be provided by the dental practitioner divisions

Service typeDHDTOHTDentist
Diagnostics
Preventive
Periodontics
Oral surgery88311 and 88316 only88311 and 88316 only
Endodontics88411 and 88414 only88411 and 88414 only
Restorative services
Prosthodontics
General services88911 only88911 only88911 only

88311—extraction of tooth (first tooth extracted on day)

88316—additional extraction of tooth

88411—direct pulp capping

88414—pulpotomy

88911—palliative care

DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist

The 2013/2014 salary differential between OHT and dentists employed in the public sector, by state and territory in Australia Summary of dental treatment services that can be provided by the dental practitioner divisions 88311—extraction of tooth (first tooth extracted on day) 88316—additional extraction of tooth 88411—direct pulp capping 88414—pulpotomy 88911—palliative care DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist

Workforce models

Two OHT-to-dentist workforce skill mix ratios were considered. For Model A National Workforce, the cost-savings was estimated using the Australian dental workforce skill mix ratio of 1:4 [24]. For Model B Victorian Workforce, the Victorian public sector dental workforce skill mix ratio of 2:3 was applied [22]. The proportion of each type of dental service provided was assigned against the type of dental provider by percentage (Table 3). This modelling approach was adopted in previous work [26].
Table 3

Dental service provision was weighted for Model A National and Model B Victoria. The dental workforce ratio for Model A and Model B is approximately 1:4 and 2:3, respectively

Models of workforce distributionOHTDentist
Model A National (1:4)19.6%80.4%
Model B Victoria (2:3)39%61%

OHT oral health therapist

Dental service provision was weighted for Model A National and Model B Victoria. The dental workforce ratio for Model A and Model B is approximately 1:4 and 2:3, respectively OHT oral health therapist

Scenario analysis and discounting

The cost effects were modelled according to the current CDBS utilisation rate of 29%. A one-way sensitivity analysis was performed for the government target of 80% CDBS utilisation rate. All costs were calculated in 2014 Australian dollars. A discount rate did not apply since costs are consumed within 1 year. Data analysis was performed using Excel 2016 (Microsoft Corporation).

Assumptions

The following assumptions were applied in this analysis: The type and number of dental services provided to children 2–17 years are evenly distributed across the state and territory jurisdictions. Dental services were weighted according to each type of provider by workforce size percentage. All the children receiving dental treatment received at least a comprehensive oral examination (item code 88011).

Results

The total CDBS expenditure in the 2014/2015 year was AUD 537M. A summary of the cost allocation according to dental service type and age groups is shown in Table 4. The total costs for the 0–4, 5–14 and 15–17 age groups were AUD 18.8M, AUD 376.5M and AUD 141.8M, respectively. The projected total costs under Model A National Workforce and Model B Victorian Workforce are AUD 511M and AUD 475M resulting in the potential cost-savings of AUD 26.5M and AUD 61.7M, respectively. For the one-way sensitivity analysis calculated using a 2.7-fold increase in dental service utilisation, the potential cost-savings would be AUD 73.2M and AUD 170.2M, respectively. A summary of the cost allocation for each type of provider is shown in Table 5.
Table 4

The total cost for Medicare benefits claims under the CDBS by dental service type in the 2014–2015 financial year

Service type0–4 age group (A$)5–14 age group (A$)15–17 age group (A$)Subtotal (A$)
Diagnostics5 244 03650 479 64018 764 66974 488 345
Preventive4 348 506121 296 38044 984 411170 629 297
Periodontics11 740246 037240 960498 738
Oral surgery430 62039 108 7728 789 36848 328 760
Endodontics125 3224 551 5563 583 6578 260 535
Restorative services8 503 913158 133 50064 770 100231 407 513
Prosthodontics3 220379 504309 428692 152
General services168 6182 292 021329 1272 789 766
Total18 835 975376 487 410141 771 720537 095 105

DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist

Table 5

The estimated costs for dental services provided under the CDBS against the type of dental service for Models A and B

Type of dental serviceModel A (National 1:4)Model B (Victoria 2:3)
DH (A$)DT/OHT (A$)Dentist (A$)Subtotal (A$)OHT (A$)Dentist (A$)Subtotal (A$)
Diagnostics3 411 1086 784 31459 861 76970 057 19120 249 55345 437 89165 687 444
Preventive7 785 21215 483 921137 124 425160 393 55946 215 798104 083 871150 299 669
Periodontics22 75645 258400 805468 819135 086304 230439 316
Oral surgery04 172 48042 320 87046 493 34911 635 67431 574 73043 210 404
Endodontics0223 6597 938 4928 162 151623 7107 362 4637 986 174
Restorative services022 474 406199 046 958221 521 36462 673 728141 164 565203 838 293
Prosthodontics00692 152692 1520692 152692 152
General services7 01113 9432 759 5952 780 54941 6172 729 8422 771 459
Total11 226 08649 197 981450 145 066510 569 133141 575 166333 349 744474 924 910

DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist

The total cost for Medicare benefits claims under the CDBS by dental service type in the 2014–2015 financial year DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist The estimated costs for dental services provided under the CDBS against the type of dental service for Models A and B DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist

Discussion

This study estimated the potential economic benefits for utilising the OHT workforce from the Australian healthcare system perspective for dental services under the CDBS as a case study. The oral health workforce profile has changed since the landmark 1993 Nuffield Foundation report recommended the establishment of the ‘oral health therapist’, to complement existing dental services mainly provided by dentists [27]. It is widely recognised that the OHT workforce provides high-quality and cost-effective dental services within their scope of practice, which enables dentists to focus on more complex procedures [28, 29]. Oral health workforce modelling in the United Kingdom shows there is a significant demand for OHT in optimising the dental workforce skill mix cost-effectively [30-32]. For example, only 30% of dentists would be required, and the number of DT would need to increase tenfold to achieve 52% in salary cost-savings [32]. Positive associations were identified for increasing productivity among dental practices that employ DH in the US private sector [33, 34]. More recently, there is a growing demand for training DT in the United States of America to meet unmet community needs for children, low-income families and rural communities [19, 35–37]. The range of dental services provided by the OHT workforce is diverse [17, 18] which could result in various levels of economic benefits for the community if the OHT workforce plays a critical role in primary healthcare. An independent policy report on public dental funding noted that changing the oral health workforce favouring OHT over dentists would reduce the cost of subsequent phases of a universal dental scheme [38]. The State of Victoria is one example where the dental workforce is more cost-effectively utilised than the national workforce skill mix due to greater utilisation of the OHT workforce. This paper quantified the potential cost-savings if public funded dental services for children reflected the 30% salary difference between the OHT and dentist based on the CDBS fee schedule. From our modelling work, there are three proposals for consideration: Option 1: Status quo: the government will continue to pay benefits at dentists’ fee rates for dental services provided by OHT. The monetary surplus is retained as ‘profit’, which can be an incentive for not-for-profit public dental services to deliver more services. Option 2: Introduce a two-tier CDBS fee structure to reflect the 30% salary differential between OHT and dentists. In other words, dental services delivered by OHT are 30% cheaper than the same service provided by dentists. Under this option, it is necessary for OHT to obtain a Medicare provider number to bill for services directly. Currently, OHT can only use a dentists’ Medicare provider number. Eligible children and adolescents would be able to access more services under the AUD 1000 2-year capped allowance if their care is provided predominately by the OHT workforce. Option 3: Introduce an overall 30% reduction in CDBS fee structure: the cost-savings would be more significant than option 2. However, this option could create a disincentive for dentists to provide dental services under their scope of practice to the CDBS eligible population and potentially widen the gap of the inequity of access to public dental care among socioeconomic disadvantage population. Although funding for dental treatment is an essential part of the healthcare system, there are alternative preventive models of care that are worth considering. For example, an outreach school-based dental check-up programme provided by the OHT workforce increased dental utilisation for Victorian public dental services for children from low-income families [15, 39, 40]. An economic evaluation determined that the intervention was less costly and more clinically effective than standard care [40]. Another strategy that could be adopted in Australia is enabling non-dental practitioners to provide oral health prevention services. Positive impacts have been demonstrated in both the Australian context [41, 42] and the United States of America [43-48]. Studies from the United Kingdom [49-51] and Sweden [52] currently capitalise on the expanded role of dental assistants to provide preventive services to children. This model is currently being explored in Victoria [22, 53]. Another potential resource allocation from the estimated cost-saving could be reinvestment to eliminate adult public dental waiting list, which can be up to 3 years [23]. Adult public dental waiting lists are a major problem in Australia dental care system since it is reliant on government funding. It is estimated that AUD 46.6M (AUD 50M–100M) is required to reduce the 2013 Australian public dental waiting list from 263 043 to zero; costs would increase to AUD 111.4M if dental services were contracted to the private sector [54]. The cost-saving based on Model A could be allocated to this, but only half of the required budget will be met, whereas the cost-saving from Model B will not only set the waiting list to zero but also provide a surplus of AUD 15.1M. There is also an additional economic benefit for utilising the OHT workforce since the model on costs required to manage the 2013 waiting only included the cost of dentists to provide adult dental services. International countries considering to fund or expand dental services under a universal healthcare system can make public dental services more affordable through the maximal utilisation of the OHT workforce. Although the potential cost-savings are obvious, it remains unknown that greater utilisation of the OHT workforce would increase CDBS uptake. Observations from past government reviews on the MTDP and CDBS dental programmes suggest that consumer-driven demand is relatively low which means dental cost subsidisation may not improve access to dental care [12-14]. However, the supply of the dental profession and willingness to participate in federal dental schemes is also critical. Greater dentist participation in Medicaid for children’s dental care in the United States of America has been associated with dentist density and high reimbursement rates [55]. Naturally, if dentists are remunerated better by not participating in subsidised schemes, utilisation rates for federal dental schemes would be less than ideal. Hence, increasing the OHT workforce, a workforce that may have a greater willingness to participate would potentially boost the CDBS uptake rate. Unequivocally, the global literature review of utilising DT in public school-based programmes increases access to dental care for children compared to the US private practice dentist-led model [19, 56]. Furthermore, the goal to implement universal dental care goes beyond the fee structures for dental practitioners and an adequate level of government funding. It is unknown whether there is sufficient infrastructure to provide dental services through the public and private sector. Therefore, the costs to establish accessible dental clinics by consumers must be considered but is beyond the scope of this paper. These costs could be offset by having a paradigm shift in the way the federal government currently funds the number of tertiary education programmes for the OHT workforce and dentists. A typical postgraduate dental programme costs more than AUD 300 000. Proportionally, domestic OHT students account for 24% of the combined OHT and dental student enrolment [26]. Alternatively, other strategies could make public dental services more affordable under a universal healthcare system. Firstly, since OHT qualifications require less time for training. The Australian government could consider gradually reducing the number of students enrolled in dental programmes. The decreasing government-supported domestic dental student enrolment would result in a reduction in government expenditure on tertiary education. Secondly, to address an inefficient workforce skill mix ratio, a rapid increase in OHT numbers could be achieved by replacing dental student positions with OHT student positions. As a result, an increased overall supply of OHT in the workforce could facilitate a more affordable investment in establishing universal dental care compared to the status quo. The major assumptions discussed above qualitatively discuss some of the main limitations of our study. Therefore, the results should be interpreted with caution.

Conclusion

In summary, the potential cost-savings from the publicly funded CDBS dental programme for children can be achieved through maximal utilisation of the OHT workforce from the Australian healthcare perspective. Policy-decision makers should consider the important role of the OHT workforce in achieving universal dental care. The potential cost-savings could be reinvested in other dental initiatives that would increase access to dental care.
Table 6

The service provision weights of individual dental services according to the dental practitioner division scope of practice for Models A and B

Item codeService descriptionModel ANationalModel B Victoria
DHOHT/DTDentistOHTDentist
88011Comprehensive oral exam0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88012Periodic oral examination0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88013Oral examination—limited0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88022Intraoral periapical or bitewing radiograph—per exposure0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88025Intraoral radiograph—occlusal, maxillary, mandibular—per exposure0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88111Removal of plaque and/or stain0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88114Removal of calculus—first visit0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88115Removal of calculus—subsequent visit0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88121Topical application of remineralisation and/or cariostatic agents, one treatment0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88161Fissure and/or tooth surface sealing—per tooth (first four services on a day)0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88162Fissure and/or tooth surface sealing—per tooth (subsequent services)0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88213Treatment of acute periodontal infection—per visit0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88221Clinical periodontal analysis and recording0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88311Removal of a tooth or part(s) thereof—first tooth extracted on a day00.1400.8600.3900.610
88314Sectional removal of a tooth or part(s) thereof—first tooth extracted on a day00101
88316Additional extraction requiring removal of a tooth or part(s) thereof, or sectional removal of a tooth00.1400.8600.3900.610
88322Surgical removal of a tooth or tooth fragment not requiring removal of bone or tooth division—first tooth extracted on a day00101
88323Surgical removal of a tooth or tooth fragment requiring removal of bone—first tooth extracted on a day00101
88324Surgical removal of a tooth or tooth fragment requiring both removal of bone and tooth division—first tooth extracted on a day00101
88326Additional extraction requiring surgical removal of a tooth or tooth fragment00101
88351Repair of skin and subcutaneous tissue or mucous membrane00101
88384Repositioning of displaced tooth/teeth—per tooth00101
88386Splinting of displaced tooth/teeth—per tooth00101
88387Replantation and splinting of a tooth00101
88392Drainage of abscess00101
88411Direct pulp capping00.1400.8600.3900.610
88412Incomplete endodontic therapy (tooth not suitable for further treatment)00101
88414Pulpotomy00.1400.8600.3900.610
88415Complete chemo-mechanical preparation of root canal—one canal00101
88416Complete chemo-mechanical preparation of root canal—each additional canal00101
88417Root canal obturation—one canal00101
88418Root canal obturation—each additional canal00101
88419Extirpation of pulp or debridement of root canal(s)—emergency or palliative00101
88421Resorbable root canal filling—primary tooth00101
88455Additional visit for irrigation and/or dressing of the root canal system—per tooth00101
88458Interim therapeutic root filling—per tooth00101
88511Metallic restoration—one surface—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88512Metallic restoration—two surfaces—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88513Metallic restoration—three surfaces—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88514Metallic restoration—four surfaces—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88515Metallic restoration—five surfaces—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88521Adhesive restoration—one surface—anterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88522Adhesive restoration—two surfaces—anterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88523Adhesive restoration—three surfaces—anterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88524Adhesive restoration—four surfaces—anterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88525Adhesive restoration—five surfaces—anterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88531Adhesive restoration—one surface—posterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88532Adhesive restoration—two surfaces—posterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88533Adhesive restoration—three surfaces—posterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88534Adhesive restoration—four surfaces—posterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88535Adhesive restoration—five surfaces—posterior tooth—direct00.1400.8600.3900.610
88572Provisional (intermediate/temporary) restoration—per tooth00.1400.8600.3900.610
88574Metal band00.1400.8600.3900.610
88575Pin retention—per pin00.1400.8600.3900.610
88576Metallic crown—preformed00.1400.8600.3900.610
88579Bonding of tooth fragment00.1400.8600.3900.610
88597Post—direct00101
88721Partial maxillary denture—resin, base only00101
88722Partial mandibular denture—resin, base only00101
88731Retainer—per tooth00101
88733Tooth/teeth (partial denture)00101
88736Immediate tooth replacement—per tooth00101
88741Adjustment of a denture00101
88761Reattaching pre-existing clasp to denture00101
88762Replacing/adding clasp to denture—per clasp00101
88764Repairing broken base of a partial denture00101
88765Replacing/adding new tooth on denture—per tooth00101
88766Reattaching existing tooth on denture—per tooth00101
88768Adding tooth to partial denture to replace an extracted or decoronated tooth—per tooth00101
88776Impression—dental appliance repair/modification00101
88911Palliative care0.06570.1310.8040.3900.610
88942Sedation—intravenous00101
88943Sedation—inhalation00101

DH dental hygienist, DT dental therapist, OHT oral health therapist

  34 in total

Review 1.  The changing role of dental auxiliaries: a literature review.

Authors:  L Baltutis; M Morgan
Journal:  Aust Dent J       Date:  1998-10       Impact factor: 2.291

2.  Expanding Where Dental Therapists Can Practice Could Increase Americans' Access To Cost-Efficient Care.

Authors:  Jane Koppelman; Kelly Vitzthum; Lisa Simon
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  2016-12-01       Impact factor: 6.301

3.  Dental Therapists as New Oral Health Practitioners: Increasing Access for Underserved Populations.

Authors:  Colleen M Brickle; Karl D Self
Journal:  J Dent Educ       Date:  2017-09       Impact factor: 2.264

4.  Estimating determinants of dentist productivity: new evidence.

Authors:  Douglas A Conrad; Rosanna Shuk-Yin Lee; Peter Milgrom; Colleen E Huebner
Journal:  J Public Health Dent       Date:  2010       Impact factor: 1.821

5.  Children's Access to Dental Care Affected by Reimbursement Rates, Dentist Density, and Dentist Participation in Medicaid.

Authors:  Natalia I Chalmers; Robert D Compton
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2017-08-17       Impact factor: 9.308

6.  North Carolina physician-based preventive oral health services improve access and use among young Medicaid enrollees.

Authors:  Ashley M Kranz; Jessica Lee; Kimon Divaris; A Diane Baker; William Vann
Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)       Date:  2014-12       Impact factor: 6.301

7.  The effect of Medicaid primary care provider reimbursement on access to early childhood caries preventive services.

Authors:  Jill Boylston Herndon; Scott L Tomar; Frank A Catalanotto; W Bruce Vogel; Elizabeth A Shenkman
Journal:  Health Serv Res       Date:  2014-07-09       Impact factor: 3.402

8.  Integrating dental screening and fluoride varnish application into a pediatric residency outpatient program: clinical and financial implications.

Authors:  Jonelle S Grant; Michael W Roberts; Wallace D Brown; Rocio B Quinoñez
Journal:  J Clin Pediatr Dent       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 1.065

Review 9.  Impact of dental therapists on productivity and finances: I. Literature review.

Authors:  Howard L Bailit; Tryfon J Beazoglou; Judy DeVitto; Taegen McGowan; Veronica Myne-Joslin
Journal:  J Dent Educ       Date:  2012-08       Impact factor: 2.264

10.  Comparison of the caries-protective effect of fluoride varnish with treatment as usual in nursery school attendees receiving preventive oral health support through the Childsmile oral health improvement programme - the Protecting Teeth@3 Study: a randomised controlled trial.

Authors:  William Wright; Stephen Turner; Yulia Anopa; Emma McIntosh; Olivia Wu; David I Conway; Lorna M D Macpherson; Alex D McMahon
Journal:  BMC Oral Health       Date:  2015-12-18       Impact factor: 2.757

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  3 in total

1.  Factors associated with disparities in out-of-pocket expenditure on dental care: results from two cross-sectional national surveys.

Authors:  Liat Orenstein; Angela Chetrit; Bernice Oberman; Michal Benderly; Ofra Kalter-Leibovici
Journal:  Isr J Health Policy Res       Date:  2020-06-17

2.  Perceptions and practices of general practitioners on providing oral health care to people with diabetes - a qualitative study.

Authors:  Prakash Poudel; Rhonda Griffiths; Vincent W Wong; Amit Arora; Jeff R Flack; Chee L Khoo; Ajesh George
Journal:  BMC Fam Pract       Date:  2020-02-13       Impact factor: 2.497

Review 3.  Attracting and retaining physicians in less attractive specialties: the role of continuing medical education.

Authors:  Van Anh Thi Nguyen; Karen D Könings; Albert J J A Scherpbier; Jeroen J G van Merriënboer
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2021-05-19
  3 in total

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