Abstract
Background: Oral health is an essential component of general health and well-being, yet barriers to the access of dental care and unmet needs are pronounced, particularly in rural areas. Despite associations with systemic health, few studies have assessed unmet dental needs across the lifespan as they present in primary care. This study describes the prevalence of oral health conditions and unmet dental needs among patients presenting for routine care in a rural Oregon family medicine practice.
Methods: Eight primary care clinicians were trained to conduct basic oral health screenings for 7 dental conditions associated with International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 9—Clinical Modification codes. During the 6-week study period, patients older than 12 months of age who presented to the practice for a regularly scheduled appointment received the screening and completed a brief dental access survey.
Results: Of 1655 eligible patients, 40.7% (n = 674) received the screening and 66.9% (n = 1108) completed the survey. Half of the patients who were screened (46.0%, n = 310) had oral health conditions detected, including partial edentulism (24.5%), dental caries (12.9%), complete edentulism (9.9%), and cracked teeth (8.9%). Twenty-eight percent of the patients reported experiencing unmet dental needs. Patients with dental insurance were significantly more likely to report better oral and general health outcomes as compared with those who had no insurance or health insurance only.
Conclusions: Oral health diseases and unmet dental needs presented substantially in patients with ages ranging across the lifespan from one rural primary care practice. Primary care settings may present opportune environments for reaching patients who are unable to obtain regular dental care.
The Surgeon General's 2000 Report notes that oral health is an essential component of the general health and well-being of all Americans.1 Oral health influences productivity, quality of life, and systemic health.2,3 Dental conditions such as periodontal (gum) disease, a source of chronic infection and inflammation in the oral cavity, have been associated with atherosclerosis, diabetes, adverse pregnancy outcomes, and increased risk of myocardial infarction and stroke.1,4,5 This may be a result of common pathophysiologic pathways that are involved in inflammation and altered host response.6 Tooth decay is the most common chronic disease in childhood, occurring 5 to 8 times more often than asthma.7,8
Many oral health conditions can be detected early and are preventable with appropriate care.9 However, researchers have identified dental care as the most frequently reported unmet health need in national studies of both adult and youth populations.9,10 Although annual dental examinations are an important form of preventive care, approximately 44% of Americans lack dental insurance and therefore may experience difficulties accessing nonemergency dental services.9,11 Researchers have also documented disparities in the access and use of dental care among rural populations.12–16 Compared with their urban counterparts, rural residents of all ages are more likely to have unmet dental needs and to report that their last dental visit was because something was “bothering or hurting.”13
Objectives of Healthy People 2010 indicate a need to increase the proportion of adults who use the oral health care system annually and to increase the proportion of low-income children and adolescents who receive preventive dental services.3 The availability of dental providers and primary care is associated with healthier teeth.17 Because of the linkage between oral health and chronic illness, experts encourage collaborative approaches between dental providers, public health, and other health care professionals to address oral health disparities.18–22
Many consider primary medical care as a venue for reaching children who do not traditionally make dental visits.23,24 Primary care medical practices in rural Oregon communities report few resources for patients who present with dental health needs.25 Rural clinicians in our primary care research network (the Oregon Rural Practice-based Research Network) wanted to confirm their impression that many patients present to their practices with dental health issues. In addition, local community leaders in medicine, dentistry, and public health sought baseline data regarding the prevalence of unmet dental needs to determine how to best address this local health concern.
We undertook this cross-sectional study to quantify unmet dental needs and oral health conditions in a rural primary care practice. The study emerged as a community-based participatory research project involving members of the county Community Health Improvement Partnership,26 local medical and dental providers, and representatives from 2 practice based research networks (PBRNs) at Oregon Health and Science University (OHSU). One PBRN focused on oral health (Practice-based Research in Oral Health) and the second on rural primary care (Oregon Rural Practice-based Research Network). Though an increasing body of literature is exploring pediatric partnerships to address childhood oral health, there is little work that addresses the prevalence of oral health conditions among all patients who present to a family medicine practice for routine medical care.22,27–30 We hypothesized that there would be a high prevalence of dental conditions and unmet dental needs as identified by family physicians in routine primary care practice. We also hypothesized that the conditions would be distributed in predictable ways, with caries most common among children and varying degrees of edentulism most common among the elderly.
Methods
Selection and Description of Participants
We collected data in a private family medicine practice located in a frontier county in rural eastern Oregon with 13,862 residents.31 Patients older than 12 months of age who presented to the practice for a regularly scheduled visit during the 6-week study period of January 2, 2008, to February 13, 2008, were eligible for participation.
Eight primary care providers (4 physicians, 1 physician assistant, and 3 family nurse practitioners) staffed the clinic and cared for more than 50% of patients in the local service area.32 The clinic's patient panel was 10,977; 59.7% of the patients were women and more than 99% were white. Two percent of the patients were younger than 1 year of age, 19% were between 1 to 14 years old, and 21% were older than 65 years old. The clinic accepted multiple payment sources, with 51% of revenue in 2008 from private insurance, 30% from Medicaid, 15% from Medicare, 3% from self-pay, and 1% from Tricare/Champus.
Data Collection
Clinic providers conducted a basic oral health screening and patients or their caregivers completed a self-report survey about dental needs and access to care. There were no extra costs to patients or third-party payers for study participation and neither study participants nor clinic staff received financial compensation. The authors developed study tools and methodologies in conjunction with clinic staff and providers. The OHSU Institutional Review Board approved this study.
Oral Health Screening
Using a mix of diagnostic photographs and didactic consultation, the local dentist (SB), in collaboration with faculty at the OHSU School of Dentistry (TH), trained participating clinicians. Instructors taught the primary care providers to identify 7 basic oral health conditions associated with International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 9—Clinical Modification diagnosis codes, including dental caries (cavities, 521.00); broken/cracked teeth (521.81); abscess (522.5); complete edentulism (no teeth, 525.40); partial edentulism (missing teeth, 525.50); unspecified disorder of teeth (525.9); and no conditions observed (V70.7). Conditions were based on the Decayed, Missing, and Filled Teeth Index (DMFT), a tool oral health professionals use for recording tooth surface conditions in epidemiologic studies, and from dental conditions commonly observed during visits to hospital emergency rooms.33,34 The dental mentors were available for onsite feedback and guidance on the first day of the intervention and via telephone consult throughout the study period.
The project leaders asked clinic providers to perform oral health screenings as a routine part of care for all eligible patients during the study period. Clinicians entered screening results both in the patient's electronic health record and on the visit Superbill.35 Research staff sent screening reminders and oral health review guides to the clinic providers twice during the study.
Patient Self-Report Dental Access Survey
Clinic front-desk staff distributed copies of the dental access survey to all eligible patients when they checked in for their appointment. Staff members encouraged parents to assist their children with the survey, and consent/assent was implied when a completed survey was returned. This survey consisted of 12 questions that were designed to assess patient insurance status, oral health care patterns, and self-reported unmet dental needs. We selected questions through consultation with the local dental champion, providers at the primary care facility, and personnel from the medical and oral health PBRNs. When possible we modeled questions after existing health assessment surveys.9,10 Patients completed the surveys in the waiting room or encounter room and returned them to the clinic check-out desk.
Statistical Analysis
Two authors (TH and MD) reviewed the free text of patient self-reported unmet dental needs and developed 12 unique condition categories. Three authors (TH, MD, and SB) coded the original text into the relevant categories. A patient's unmet dental needs could fall into multiple categories (eg, unmet needs regarding both caries/fillings/crowns and extractions).
We performed all statistical analyses using SPSS for Windows (version 17.0, SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL). In the case of duplicate surveys, we used the first completed. χ2 goodness-of-fit tests were used to compare age and sex distributions of study participants with the age and sex distributions of all eligible patients who presented to the clinic during the study period. We used Pearson χ2 tests (or fisher's exact test, for 2 × 2 cross-tabulation tables) to compare the distribution of oral health conditions and unmet needs across age and sex categories.
Results
Patient Sample
During the study period, 1655 unique patients met the study eligibility criteria (Table 1). Of these patients, 40.7% (674) received the oral health screening and 66.9% (1108) completed the dental access survey. More than one third of the patients (n = 591, 35.7%) both completed the survey and received the screening. Performance of the oral health screen varied among the individual clinic providers, with screening rates ranging from 7.7% to 66.8% (mean 38.6%, SD, 19.6%).
As compared with all patients who presented for care, there were no statistically significant differences in the sex or age composition of patients who received the oral health screening (33.7% male, P = .21; by age, P = .74) or who completed the patient survey (35.6% male, P = .73; by age, P = .09) (Table 1). Furthermore, the age by sex distribution of patients who completed the survey or who received the screening were not significantly different from all eligible patients presenting for care during the study period (all χ2 goodness-of-fit P values were non-significant).
Oral Health Screening Condition Detection and Distribution
For the 674 unique patients who received an oral health screening, 46.0% (n = 310) had oral health conditions; a total of 394 conditions were detected (Table 2). Of these 310 patients, 76.8% had only one oral health condition, 18.4% had 2 conditions, and 4.8% had 3 conditions. Only one patient had 4 oral health conditions. Commonly detected conditions included partial edentulism (24.5%), dental caries (12.9%), complete edentulism (9.9%), and cracked/broken teeth (8.9%).
There were significant differences in the distribution of certain oral health conditions (caries, edentulism, partial edentulism, cracked teeth) by patient age (all χ2 test P < .05) (Table 2). Patients older than 65 were the most likely to have complete edentulism (29.9%) or partial edentulism (39.7%). Dental caries were most prevalent in younger patients aged 5 to 14 years of age (16.1%) and in young adult/middle-aged patients aged 15 to 44 years of age (18.8%), whereas broken or cracked teeth were most common for the 15- to 44-year and 45- to 64-year age groups (9.4% and 11.6%, respectively). Generally there were no statistically significant differences in the distribution of oral health conditions by sex. However, male patients older than age 65 were significantly more likely than their female counterparts to have caries present (P = .01).
Self-Reported Insurance, Dental Visits, Health Status, and Unmet Dental Needs
Most patients reported having health insurance (91.2%, n = 1006), but only 56.5% had both health and dental insurance (Table 3). Fewer than 1% of the patients (n = 3) reported having dental insurance in the absence of health insurance. Although 66.0% of the patients reported having a source of regular dental care, only 53.8% had seen a dentist during the past year. Patients with dental insurance relative to no insurance were 6 times more likely to report that they had a regular source of dental care (Table 4). This was significantly different from patients who had only health insurance; these patients were twice as likely to report having a regular source of dental care when compared with uninsured patients (P ≤ .002).
Patient report of overall health was significantly correlated with report of oral health (Spearman's rho = 0.59; P < .001). Most respondents (70.6%) reported “average” or “good” oral health. Among those who reported poor oral health, 38.2% reported poor overall health and only 1.6% reported excellent overall health. Patients with dental insurance were 3 times as likely to report that their oral health was “good” or “excellent” and twice as likely to report the same about their overall health when compared with those without any insurance. Patients with dental insurance were more likely to report having no unmet dental needs than uninsured patients (odds ratio [OR], 3.1; 95% CI, 2.0–4.9). This was significantly different (P ≤ .002) from patients with health insurance only, who were also more likely to report no unmet dental needs (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.3–3.1).
Perceived Unmet Dental Needs: Results, Risk Factors, and Screening Correspondence
More than one fourth of survey respondents (28.0%) indicated that they had unmet dental needs (Table 3). The most commonly reported needs included cavities/crowns (11.2%), dentures (6.4%), examination/cleaning (4.9%), extractions (4.0%), lack of money to obtain care (3.3%), and broken/cracked teeth (2.5%). Other coded categories of unmet dental needs were identified by 4.7% of the respondents and included references to periodontics, endodontics, orthodontics, bridges, or multiple needs (implied with responses such as “a lot”). Other miscellaneous needs were identified by 3.1% of the respondents.
Patients who saw a dentist during the past year were 10.4 times more likely to report that they had no unmet dental needs (95% CI, 2.9–42). Patients who had a regular source of dental care were more than 5 times as likely to report having no unmet dental needs (OR, 5.6; 95% CI, 4.2–7.4). Patients without unmet dental needs were more likely to rate their oral health or overall health as good or excellent when compared with those who reported having unmet needs (OR, 5.6; 95% CI, 4.2–7.5 and OR, 3.4; 95% CI, 2.6–4.5, respectively).
There were no significant differences in report of unmet dental needs by sex. The reported types of unmet dental needs differed significantly across age categories. Patients 5 to 44 years of age reported needing cavities repaired and extractions at significantly higher rates than patients in the other age categories. Older patients reported dentures as an unmet need 6 times more often than younger patients. Of the 591 patients (35.7%) who both completed the survey and received the screening examination, those who screened positive for any oral health condition were more likely to report unmet dental needs on the survey than those who had no conditions detected (OR, 3.6; 95% CI, 2.4–5.2).
Discussion
Our findings indicate that oral health conditions are common in patients who present for regularly scheduled visits in rural primary care; approximately half of the screened patients experience an oral health condition and almost one-third report unmet dental needs. Results from the patient survey indicated that a lack of dental insurance was associated with greater reported unmet dental needs and lower levels of self-rated oral and overall health. For most oral health outcomes the presence of dental insurance was significantly more protective than health insurance only. Although there were no statistically significant variations in the distribution of oral health conditions by sex, the prevalence of oral health conditions varied significantly by patient age on both the screening and survey in predicted ways. Specifically, partial edentulism and complete edentulism were more prevalent among patients older than age 65 whereas cavities were most common for patients aged 5 to 44 years.
Few studies have explored the prevalence of oral health conditions and unmet dental needs as they are presented in a primary care practice in patients with ages spanning across the entire lifespan. Our results describe an important health issue in primary care but do have some limitations. There was substantial variability in the rate at which providers conducted oral health screenings. Providers and clinic staff believed this was a result of differential study interest, variations in workload, and competing priorities during the office visit. In addition, 33% of patients who presented for care did not complete the dental access survey. Clinic staff reported that all patients who presented for a scheduled appointment received the survey, but missing surveys resulted when patients declined because they felt too sick, were not interested, had privacy concerns, or were late for an appointment and therefore lacked the time. A small number of patients were unable to complete the survey because of cognitive impairment or literacy issues. Although it is possible that patients who had oral health concerns were more likely to receive the screening or complete the survey, we believe such a bias was small because both were implemented as aspects of routine care. There were no significant differences in sex, age, or age by sex comparisons between all eligible patients who presented for care during the study period and those who completed the study activities. Thus, the sample seems representative of the clinic population.
It is likely that both the detection of oral health conditions and patients self-report of unmet needs were underestimated in this study. The primary care clinicians received abbreviated training about oral health assessments; lacked access to normal diagnostics such as dental radiographs and magnification; and were in environments that lacked a dental chair, high-intensity lighting, and designated screening time, thereby limiting diagnostic abilities. In addition, low dental literacy among rural populations may lead to underreporting of dental needs because of differences in what conditions are perceived to require care.12,13
In this study 46.2% of patients reported that they had not seen a dentist during the past year, a rate 11.5% lower than the proportion for rural residents in national studies.13 We performed screenings and surveys in a primary care setting and our data may not be representative of national patterns because patients who present to primary care may be different from the general population. Our participants who had dental insurance or health insurance only were almost 3 times as likely to report having a dental visit during the past year when compared with patients who did not have insurance, although this finding was only marginally significant.
The conditions that impede access to dental care are multifactorial and include social, economic, and cultural factors.12,34,36 Rural populations are particularly at risk because they tend to be less affluent, older, and less likely to have private insurance than their urban counterparts.13,37 A paucity of dental providers and/or providers who accept low-income patients further impedes access for rural populations.12,13
The importance of access to dental care is heightened by the increasingly recognized connections between oral and systemic health. Several studies have identified the potential for pediatricians and family medicine providers to improve oral health and reach patients who are unlikely to make dental visits.23,24,27 Barriers that inhibit greater involvement in dental care include medical providers’ limited knowledge and difficulty with referring subgroups that require treatment for oral care.24 These factors, plus competing demands for preventive health and chronic illness care, are important hurdles to expanding the scope of care.
Despite these barriers, pediatricians agree that oral health assessments and preventive counseling should be a routine part of well-child care.24 Family physicians in our study echoed the desire to provide assessment, preventive counseling, and referrals for oral health. In a follow-up survey, participating providers noted that, although completing the oral health screening was more time consuming than they had anticipated, they appreciated the opportunity to quantify their patients’ unmet dental needs. Many commented that this study helped them realize how often oral health is overlooked in primary care and that the training improved their ability to conduct oral health exams. One clinician commented, “I realized I looked past the teeth to the pharynx in my normal oral examination.” Study clinicians indicated that it was important for primary care providers to be able to identify dental conditions, reinforce the importance of regular dental care to their patients, and serve as a referral point for patients who had oral health needs.
Family physicians provide care for one third of children in the US population,38 and a growing number of studies use this setting as an opportunity to provide pediatric preventive dental services, including risk assessment, screening, referral, application of fluoride varnish, and oral health education.28,30,39 Other studies address the dental needs of geriatric patients in primary medical care settings.39 Our data indicate that attention to oral health in primary care should not be limited to pediatric or geriatric patients because conditions appear among patients across all ages.
Conclusion
Additional research is needed to assess the prevalence of oral health conditions and unmet needs in other care settings. Our results offer a picture of oral health conditions and unmet dental needs experienced by patients in one rural primary care clinic. Further, our data corroborate the results of an objective oral health screen with a self-report survey. These findings contribute to the literature on oral health disparities, provide an important foundation for local efforts to address the community's unmet dental needs, and may inform future interventions to address oral health in primary care settings.
If medical providers are to confidently address oral health across the lifespan in patients presenting in the primary care setting, attention to training, adequate referral opportunities, and reimbursement are necessary.24,40 Policymakers must also acknowledge the important links between oral and systemic health.41 Partnerships among primary care settings, PBRNs, and community health partners may provide opportunities to develop and implement interventions to reduce the burden of oral health disease and facilitate overall patient health and well-being.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank the members of the Baker County Community Health Improvement Partnership for their assistance with all stages of project development, including problem identification, study design, data analysis, and project next steps. Special appreciation is given to Cindy Denne, Eva Sorensen, and the staff, providers, and patients at Eastern Oregon Medical Associations—their dedication to improving community health made this project possible. Thanks to Cindy Barnes and Emilia Adams for data entry assistance. Richard Deyo, MD, MPH; Lisa Lyman, PhD; Jean O'Malley, MPH; and members of the OHSU Department of Family Medicine Working on Research Collaboratively Group provided helpful feedback about the manuscript.
Notes
This article was externally peer reviewed.
Funding: This research was supported by a Clinical and Translational Science Award to Oregon Health and Sciences University (National Institute of Health/National Center for Research Resources grant no. 1U1 RR02414-01).
Conflict of interest: none declared.
- Received for publication April 14, 2009.
- Revision received August 13, 2009.
- Accepted for publication August 20, 2009.