PA Coalition for Oral Health
P.O. Box 244
6059 Allentown Blvd
Harrisburg, PA 17112
Writes the American Dental Association in a press release:
WASHINGTON - August 16, 2011—The American Dental Association today released the second in a series of papers that examine the challenges and solutions to bringing good oral health to millions of Americans, including the growing population whose only possible source of dental care is the so-called oral health safety net.
Breaking Down Barriers to Oral Health for All Americans: Repairing the Tattered Safety Net emphasizes the absence of a coordinated, systematic approach to treating underserved populations. It identifies commonsense remedies that can greatly improve safety net programs, even absent the major funding increases that are unlikely to occur in the current economic climate.
“Major improvements in the dental safety net will not occur until the nation places much greater value on oral health,” said ADA President Raymond F. Gist, D.D.S. “Treating disease that could have been easily prevented or treated in its early stages, but has progressed to the point of chronic infection, and lost teeth, gum tissue or bone is one of the major reasons why these clinical delivery systems remain overwhelmed.”
The paper provides seven fundamental principles that should guide efforts to repair and enhance safety net programs.
While the paper emphasizes the safety net’s weaknesses, it does so in the context of the ADA’s commitment to support the tireless efforts of thousands of dentists, allied health professionals, and other public and private sector workers and volunteers who constitute its backbone.
“Surely the various groups and individuals who seek to repair and enhance the safety net differ somewhat on priorities and methods. But we must all recognize that our common goal eclipses these differences. If all of the stakeholders involved keep the goal of a healthier, more productive nation at the forefront of our thinking and actions, we can truly progress toward better oral health for all Americans,” said Dr. Gist.
Future ADA papers will address such topics as patient utilization, disease prevention, oral health education and funding the delivery system.