| Literature DB >> 35048040 |
Chloe Meng Jiang1, Chun Hung Chu1, Duangporn Duangthip1, Ronald L Ettinger2, Fernando Neves Hugo3, Matana Kettratad-Pruksapong4, Jian Liu5, Leonardo Marchini2, Gerry McKenna6, Takahiro Ono7, Wensheng Rong5, Martin Schimmel8,9, Naseem Shah10, Linda Slack-Smith11, Stella X Yang1, Edward C M Lo1.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to present a concise summary of the oral health policies and oral healthcare schemes for older adult populations in a number of selected countries around the world. In this paper, the current and planned national/regional oral health policies and oral healthcare schemes of nine countries (Australia, Brazil, China including Hong Kong, India, Japan, Switzerland, Thailand, the United Kingdom, and the United States) are reported. Barriers and challenges in oral health promotion in terms of devising oral health policies, implementing oral health schemes, and educating the future dental workforce are discussed. In response to the aging of population, individual countries have initiated or reformed their healthcare systems and developed innovative approaches to deliver oral health services for older adults. There is a global shortage of dentists trained in geriatric dentistry. In many countries, geriatric dentistry is not formally recognized as a specialty. Education and training in geriatric dentistry is needed to produce responsive and competent dental professionals to serve the increasing number of older adults. It is expected that oral health policies and oral healthcare services will be changing and reforming in the coming decades to tackle the enduring oral health challenges of aging societies worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: aging; dental care; healthcare policy; international health; older adults
Year: 2021 PMID: 35048040 PMCID: PMC8757822 DOI: 10.3389/froh.2021.703526
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oral Health ISSN: 2673-4842
Summary of oral health status of older adult populations in the selected countries/regions.
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| Australia | 2017–2019 | 17.8% of older adults (over 75 years) had untreated caries | – | 20.5% | 4.8 | [ |
| 2004–2006 | DMFT: 23.7 (over 65 years old) | 53.4% (over 65 years) | – | – | [ | |
| Brazil | 2010 | DMFT: 27.5 | CPI = 4: 3.3% | 53.7% | 25.3 | [ |
| China | 2015–2016 | DMFT > 0: 98% | 14.7% had 6+mm pockets | 4.5% | 9.5 | [ |
| Hong Kong | 2011 | 47.8% (65–74 years old) had untreated caries | 59.2% dentate persons had 4+mm pockets | 5.6% | – | [ |
| India | 2014 | 50.1% | 79.4% | – | – | [ |
| 2007 | – | – | 65–74 years old: 18.5% | – | [ | |
| Japan | 2016 | DMFT: | 65–74 years old: 57.5% | 65–69 years old: 2.4% | – | [ |
| Switzerland | 2012 | – | – | 65–74 years old: 6.5% | 65–74 years old: 7 | [ |
| 2011 | DMFT: 26.8 | – | 19% | 16.5 | [ | |
| 2012 | – | 95% | 52% | – | [ | |
| Thailand | 2017 | 52.6% of older adults aged 60–74 years had untreated caries | 24.1% (4–5 mm PD) 12.2% (6 mm PD) | 8.7% | 13.1 | [ |
| 43.5% of older adults aged 80–85 years had untreated caries | 10.6% (4–5 mm PD) 5.9% (6 mm PD) | 31% | 21.9 | [ | ||
| UK | 2009 | DT | Pocket and LoA of 4 mm or more | 65–74 years old: 15% | – | [ |
| US | 2015–2018 | – | – | 12.9% | – | [ |
| 2011–2016 | 16% of the older adults had untreated caries | – | – | – | [ | |
| 2009–2012 | – | 62.3% with at least one site ≥5 mm | – | – | [ |
Summary of current oral health policies for older adult populations in the selected countries/regions.
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| Australia | Limited large-scale programs addressing the oral health of older adults | No | A small number | No | Shortage of dental personnel, lack of expertise in geriatric dentistry |
| Brazil | Older adults are prioritized to have preferential access to oral health care within the primary health care | Yes | 275 | Yes | Limited access to dental services |
| China | Cost of dental treatments is partially covered by the medical insurance system | Yes | Unknown | No | Poor oral health knowledge, economic barriers, perceived lower priority for oral healthcare by older adults |
| Hong Kong | No specific oral healthcare policy for older adults | No | Unknown | No | Shortage of dental personnel, lack of expertise in geriatric dentistry |
| India | No specific oral healthcare policy for older adults | No | Unknown | No | Planning and implementation of healthcare schemes differ in different states |
| Japan | Re-designed system to deliver dental care to institutionalized older adults | Yes | Unknown | Yes | Reforms and continuous reviews of the medical insurance system and the long-term care insurance system are being carried out |
| Switzerland | Dental care is excluded from the basic health insurance | Yes | Unknown | No | Main obstacle is the exceptional and independent organization between the cantons and that oral care is excluded from the basic health care insurance |
| Thailand | National Oral Health Plan for the Elders 2016–2022 (NOHPE) is the main driver for a wide range of programs and activities regarding oral health care for older adults | Yes | Unknown | Yes | Lack of budget |
| Australia UK | Oral healthcare services for older adults are provided through the publicly funded National Health Service (NHS) | No | Unknown | No | Better implementation of the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guideline on maintaining and improving the oral health of care home residents |
| USA | Dental care is primarily out-of-pocket, but only 29.2% of older adults have dental health insurance and this percentage declines with age | Yes | Unknown | Yes | Older adults with lower socio-economic status have multiple barriers accessing oral healthcare, including transportation, finding a dentist educated in geriatric dentistry, paying for dental care, and a lack of understanding about the availability of financial assistance programs |