Journal of Healthcare Leadership (Mar 2023)
Science-Informed Health Policies for Oral and Systemic Health
Abstract
Harold C Slavkin,1 Peter A Dubois,2 Dushanka V Kleinman,3 Ralph Fuccillo4 1Ostrow School of Dentistry, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA; 2California Dental Association, California Dental Association Holding Company, Inc., Sacramento, California, USA; 3University of Maryland School of Public Health, College Park, Maryland, USA; 4Cambridge Concord Associates, Stoneham, Massachusetts, USACorrespondence: Dushanka V Kleinman, Email [email protected]: Oral, dental and craniofacial (ODC) health has a profound impact on general health and welfare throughout life, yet US dentists and physicians operate across misaligned silos. This protracted division limits access to optimal health, supports fee for services, and exacerbates health disparities. Early in the 20th century, the most frequent dental therapy was tooth extraction: removed infected teeth were substituted by prosthetic appliances – commonly, dentures or nothing. Most adults assumed becoming edentulous was a normal corollary of aging. With the discovery of penicillin and other antibiotics, healthcare professionals and policy makers predicted infectious diseases would become irrelevant. However, given numerous health threats, including SARS-CoV-2, HIV, multidrug-resistant bacteria, Zika virus, Ebola virus, and now monkeypox, public and professional awareness of transmissible infectious diseases has never been more evident. Ironically, little attention has been paid to unmet transmissible, infectious, common oral diseases – dental caries and periodontal diseases. Therefore, these persist within “the silent and invisible epidemic”. The preventable death of a young boy in 2007 from an infected untreated tooth that produced bacterial meningitis is a profound reminder that our nation has vast inequities in education, health, and welfare. The impact of oral infections on hospital-acquired pneumonia, post-operative infection in cardiac valve surgery, and even academic performances of disadvantaged children displayed through sociodemographic characteristics and access to care determinants also are profound! This paper asserts that current and emerging ODC health knowledge and science will inform health policies and advance equity in access to care, affordable costs, and optimal healthcare outcomes. We recommend that legal and regulatory systems and public health programs be required to ensure health equity. A fair healthcare system that addresses holistic healthcare must be transparent, accessible, integrated and provide a standard of oral healthcare based upon scientific evidence for all people across the lifespan.Keywords: dental caries, periodontal disease, primary care, health equity, research