Mary E. Williard, DDS Director, DHAT Educational Program Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium Colorado Oral Health Leadership Convening Feb. 3-4, 2014,

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Mary E. Williard, DDS Director, DHAT Educational Program Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium Colorado Oral Health Leadership Convening Feb. 3-4, 2014, Wellshire Event Center, Denver, CO DENTAL HEALTH AIDE THERAPIST (DHAT) Slide 2 5.3 million additional children will gain public insurance coverage under ACA. Pew Center on the States, 2014 Many dentists dont treat Medicaid or to uninsured children Nearly 52 million school hours are lost annually because of childhood dental disease Dental Access Issues in the U.S. 2013 Dental Hygiene Therapy.co.uk Slide 3 History of Dental Caries Among Alaska Native People 1984 1925 Archeological records show caries rate of ~1% 1928 1930s Studies show lowest caries rate in the world Improved air transportation and dietary changes Prevalence of dental caries in children 2x same aged U.S. children 1999 Vast majority of children have dental caries Price, WA. 1939. Nutrition and Physical Degeneration. 8 th ed. Lemon Grove, CA. Slide 4 Dental Therapists: A Definition Primary oral health care professionals Basic clinical dental treatment and preventive services Multidisciplinary team members Advocate for the needs of clients Refer for services beyond the scope of the dental therapists practice.* *SASKATCHEWAN DENTAL THERAPISTS ASSOCIATION Slide 5 A Review of the Global Literature on Dental Therapists* *Prepared by: David A. Nash, Jay W. Friedman, Kavita R. Mathu-Muju, Peter G. Robinson, Julie Satur, Susan Moffat, Rosemary Kardos, Edward C.M. Lo, Anthony H.H. Wong, Nasruddin Jaafar, Jos van den Heuvel, Prathip Phantumvanit, Eu Oy Chu, Rahul Naidu, Lesley Naidoo, Irving McKenzie and Eshani Fernando Supported by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation http://www.wkkf.org/news-and-media/article/2012/04/nash-report-is-evidence-that-dental-therapists-expand- access Dental therapists included in the oral health workforce have the potential to decrease the cost of care, specifically for children. There are variable lengths of training for dental therapists, from two to four years, with two years being the tradition. Dental therapists improve access to care, specifically for children. Dental therapists have a record of providing oral health care safely. The public values the role of dental therapists in the oral health workforce. Slide 6 Special Issue: Workforce Development in Dentistry: Addressing Access to Care Spring 2011 Volume 71, Issue Supplement s2 11-person academic panel Model curriculum is based on a two- year, post-secondary training program. Curriculum Developed Slide 7 Dental Therapy Education Standards Community Catalyst Panel of experts DT Educators Dental Therapists Dentist Supervisors Commission on Dental Accreditation Draft Requires 3 years & baccalaureate Slide 8 DHAT 2-year Education No Prerequisites Conan Murat, DHAT, standing his ground Slide 9 Community Health Aide Program Structure Community Health Aide Program Certification Board Federally appointed Diverse group (MD, DDS, RN, PA, CHAP) Standards and Procedures Educational requirements Certification process Scope of practice Operated by the Alaska Tribal Health System Slide 10 http://www.akchap.org Click on: CHAP Certification Board Library Page CHAP CB Standards and Procedures Slide 11 DHAT Education NEED TO KNOW Limited scopes Use same texts as dental schools Supervision Prevention oriented team approach Accessible to student in target populations Cultural Competence Patient centered Slide 12 DHAT Curriculum Year 1: basic health sciences, basic dental concepts, professional role development, introduction to clinic, patient and facilities management. Year 2: clinical year, expansion of concepts learned in first year, extractions, community project, village dental rotations DHAT Students Kate Kohl, Trisha Patton dissecting a cow heart Slide 13 Alaska DHAT Educational Program information: First year: 40 weeks Second year: 39 weeks Total: 79 weeks (3160 hours) Curriculum Break-down first year Biological Science: 30% Social Science: 10% Pre-clinic: 40% Clinic: 20% Curriculum Break-down second year Biological Science: 15% Social Science: 7% Pre-clinic: 0% Clinic: 78% (1215 hours) Curriculum Break-down two years combined: Biological Science: 22.5% Social Science: 8.5% Pre-clinic: 20% (632 hours) Clinic: 49% (1548 hours) Slide 14 DHAT Scope of Practice Diagnosis and Treatment Planning, Prevention, Basic Hygiene, Radiographs, Infection Control, Restorative, Pediatric, Urgent Care, Extractions, Community Projects, Clinic Management, Equipment Repair and Maintenance, Referral Process All ages General Supervision Part of a team of dental and medical providers DHAT, Ben Steward, examining patient Slide 15 Research Triangle Institute Clinical Evaluation Summary of findings Technically competent to perform procedures within their scope of practice Providing care safely and appropriately under general supervision of dentists Successfully treating cavities and helping relieve pain for patients without previous access to regular care Patient satisfaction high Well accepted in tribal villages Slide 16 From ANTHC Consultant Survey of AK Tribal Dental Directors Each DHAT team on average, provides care to 830 patients during approximately 1200 patient encounters (or visits) each year. 700 visits 500 visits Scott and Co. Consulting Slide 17 Tribal revenue as reported by dental directors with DHAT The net annual revenue stream generated by the employer is $125,000-$245,000 after costs (DHAT and dental assistant salary, benefits, travel, supplies, and other costs) with savings of ~$40,000 in avoided travel costs to receive dental care 19 DHATs generate 76 jobs (dental assistants, training program faculty, management, staff) with half of these jobs and the related $9m economic activity in rural Alaska Scott and Co. Consulting, 2011 Slide 18 Improved Access and Quality 25 certified DHAT 81 communities in rural AK Over 40,000 people have access Continuity of care Higher level of care possible Dentist working up to their licensure DHAT Aurora Johnson, NZ Educated Slide 19 DHA Supervision It Takes a Team Slide 20 Systems Insure Success The routine of supervision (Different from DDS) Starts in school Solidified in preceptorship Maintained in field Formats for reports and consultation HIPPA compliant communication systems Telehealth cart, Emmonak Subregional clinic DHAT Ben Steward in pre-clinical lab with mock Telehealth case on monitor Slide 21 DHA Certification After coursework- preceptorship Direct supervision Standing orders- Limits for general supervision Recertification- Every two years CDE- 24 hours Direct observation of all technical skills in scope. DHAT students Bernadette Charles and Tambre Guido with supervising dentist Edwin Allgair, 2010 Slide 22 Community-based DHAT as part of a dentist led team Slide 23 A more complete dental team A full time dental presence keeps oral health at the forefront year round Patients feel comfortable around her Community pride. Pride among the THO Board of Directors. Improved access to routine and preventive dental care Fewer emergencies for dental pain, and less time to treatment Dentist Supervisor Quotes About Working With DHAT Scott and Co. Consulting, 2011 Slide 24 Benefits of DHAT DHAT students Elsie Patrick and Shannon Hardy practice head and neck physical examination techniques Culturally competent Stable workforce Highly satisfied Role models Economic benefits Community pride Slide 25 Prevention and Promotion The Heart of DHAT Practice Slide 26 Community Projects Elder Oral Screenings DHAT student Sheena Nelson with instructor Kathy Balasko, RDH, and elder Slide 27 Head Start Oral Health Education Slide 28 ECC Education for CHAP & Medical Providers Slide 29 Demographics of the existing US dental workforce Dentists: 86% White 6.9% Asian/Pacific Islander 3.4 African American 3.4 Hispanic 0.2 American Indian *1 Dental hygienists: >90% non Hispanic white *2 * 1. Current Demographics and Future Trends of the Dentist Workforce, Institute of Medicine, The U.S. Oral Health Workforce in the Coming Decade: A Workshop February 9, 2009, Richard W. Valachovic, D.M.D., M.P.H., Executive Director, American Dental Education Association 2. Dental Hygiene at the Crossroads of Change, Environmental Scan 2011 2021, Marsha Rhea and Craig Bettles. Slide 30 Who are your target students? For some students, the only way to get into a health career is to take it a chunk at a time. Requiring a bachelors degree would make health careers inaccessible to many people, said [Carolyn] O'Daniel, who is dean of allied health and nursing at Jefferson Community and Technical College in Kentucky. Colleges worry about degree creep in health care, By Ellie Ashford, Published August 10, 2011. Community College Times, American Association of Community Colleges. Slide 31 DHAT Student and Practitioner Retention Rates AK program 64% completion rate US 2-year College completion rates ~29.1% 35 total graduates (NZ +AK) 29 DHAT practicing 10 year retention rate 83% Happy customer Slide 32 Why DHAT Work So Well Not Mini-Dentists 2 year educational model From communities they serve General supervision Ability to do extractions Ability to diagnose Certification recertification Community based Trisha Patton, DHAT student, taking x-rays Slide 33 Degree Creep and Dental Therapy Politics Jones cited additional problems with degree creep in nursing: a lack of qualified faculty to teach baccalaureate programs, a decline in workforce diversity, deceased access to health care in rural areas, and a decline in job satisfaction and morale if health care workers feel their skills and knowledge are not fully used.* Barbara Jones, president of South Arkansas Community College (SouthArk) South Arkansas Community College *Colleges worry about degree creep in health care, By Ellie Ashford, Published August 10, 2011. Community College Times, American Association of Community Colleges. 2 year DT are employable, Many RDH unemployed Slide 34 DHAT Educational Program Address: 4200 Lake Otis Parkway, Ste 204 Anchorage, AK 99508 Mary E. Williard, DDS 907-729-5602 Sarah Shoffstall-Cone, DDS 907-729-5607 DHAT training is ANTHCsmile on Facebook and twitter website: http://anthc.org/chs/chap/dhs/http://anthc.org/chs/chap/dhs/ Div. of Community Health Services- DHAT education