10.1 Summary
10.1 Summary
10.1 Summary
Development of Plan
Prepared by the Oral Health Monitoring Group
Subcommittee of the Community Care and Population
Health Principal Committee
Reports through the Australian Health Ministers’ Advisory
Council to the COAG Health Council
This is the second plan and is based on the profile of the
oral health of the population, and findings from several
studies which indicate improvements over the last 20‐30
years, but still evidence of poor oral health among Australians.
More than 90% of adults and 40% of young children have experienced tooth decay
at some stage in their life.
Three out of ten adults have untreated tooth decay.
Only four out of every ten Australian adults (39%) have a favourable visiting pattern,
i.e. seeing a dentist once a year for a check‐up, rather than waiting to treat poor oral
health.
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and adults who are socially
disadvantaged or on low incomes have more than double the rate of poor oral
health than their counterparts.
People with additional or specialised health care needs or those living in regional
and remote areas find it more difficult to access oral health care.
Even though we have made progress, there are still challenges to address, which is
the purpose of the plan
Originally in the first but is also in the second oral health plan
Reinforcement that oral health is an important part of health and cannot be
separated from health
Concerns about mouth, teeth and dentures are related to quality of life, thus oral
health has an influence on how people perceive their quality of life – important
because it is telling us that oral health has to be improved to achieve good quality of
life
Emphasis on prevention
Recognition of the importance of reducing oral health disparities and inequities in
access to oral health care
In all areas, the Plan seeks to make the best possible use of resources, both human
and financial by:
o Basing actions on the best available evidence
o making effective use of the full oral health team (general and specialist
dentists, dental therapists, dental hygienists, oral health therapists,
prosthetists and dental assistants)
o building strong cooperation and partnerships across the health and
community services sectors and beyond, to address the socio‐economic
factors that determine general and oral health
Reduction of inequalities
‘Reduce the prevalence, severity and impact of poor oral health AND inequalities in
access to Oral health treatment’
Aim of the health plan is to work to reduce those inequalities
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Guiding Principles
Universalism – more heavily covers
people who are disadvantaged
o Not just that they have access, but the outcome of that access
Foundation areas
Summary of strategies
Priority populations
slightly different from the previous one
Groups that have inequalities with their oral health due to social disadvantage
What is the state of Australia’s oral health
Oral health of Australian children using public dental services improved significantly
from mid‐ 1970s to the mid‐1990s.
During this time substantial reduction in tooth decay.
Decline stabilised in the 90’s, and there has even been an increase in DMFT since
then
Most likely the result of:
o improved access to fluoridated drinking water
o Use of fluoride toothpastes
o Provision of preventive oral health services
o Adoption of good oral hygiene practices
Oral health is a missing opportunity – to use the MGD’s to improve oral health
UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs): A time to act.
Rodrigo Mariño, Rajdeep Singh Banga doi: 10.17126/joralres.2016.002
We have an opportunity to make oral health part of the new goals