330 likes | 561 Views
CROC: Taking a Bite Out of Early Childhood Cavities on the Eastern Shore National Primary Oral Health Care Conference December 9-13, 2007 San Diego, CA Scott Wolpin, DMD Where is the Eastern Shore of Maryland?? CROC Children's Regional Oral health Consortium
E N D
CROC: Taking a Bite Out of EarlyChildhood Cavities on the Eastern Shore National Primary Oral Health Care Conference December 9-13, 2007 San Diego, CA Scott Wolpin, DMD
CROC • Children's • Regional • Oral health • Consortium
Collaboration: the Stakeholders • Eastern Shore Area Health Education Center • University of Maryland Dental School • Choptank Community Health System • Three Lower Counties Community Services • Shore Health System (DGH, EMH)
How does a community raise a CROC? • In 2004, a 1 year HRSA Planning Grant was used to set the table • Eastern Shore Oral Health Action Network (ESOHAN) assembled • In 2005, a 3 year HRSA Rural Health Outreach Grant proposal is submitted/funded
Community Responsiveness The hope is for Medicaid-insured children to access primary and specialty dental services closer to home, to give every child on the Shore a healthy start…
Innovation: CROC’s Charge • Develop a dental home for Medicaid and uninsured children of Dorchester County • Develop a regional hospital-based pediatric dental program for children requiring GA • Develop clinical and community-based education training opportunities for dental hygiene students
Dorchester County • Top 4 of Maryland’s 24 counties with worst child health indicators • Half of all children in the area are eligible for Medical Assistance • No dental home for Medicaid-insured or uninsured children
Target Population • All low income children in Dorchester County – uninsured or enrolled in MA • Immigrant and migrant worker’s children
Water Fluoridation* * Determined by the difference between Public Water Systems with Fluoride > 0.8ppm and total population, for each county
Medicaid-insured Children in Maryland • The percentage of Maryland school children with decay is 60%. The national average is 50%. 75% of the decay is found in 25% of the children (MA) • Children who are eligible for Medicaid, Free or reduced lunch programs have over 30% more cavities than the state average • All children who receive Medical Assistance have 70% of their cavities untreated, whereas children who pay for dental services through insurance or out-of-pocket average 50% untreated disease • Only one-third of medical Assistance eligible children see a dentist every 6 months. The state average is 48%.
Oral Health Mouth of a two year old child
Maryland’s Medicaid Reform Program: HealthChoice • Initially there were 7 dental Managed Care Organizations (MCO) but he State is now hoping to move to a single vendor • On the Eastern Shore, less than ten percent of the 160 practicing dentists accept Medicaid-insured patients • In Dorchester County, there are no dentists accepting Medicaid-insured patients
Workforce Disparities • There are three training programs for dental hygienists in Maryland, however, none are located on the Eastern Shore • Not only is there a shortage of hygienists on the Eastern Shore, less than ten percent of the dental hygienists work with the target population
Integration: Public Health Initiatives • Pediatric Dental Fellows • Satellite Dental Hygiene Training Program
“Titanic Approach” Until a complete oral health team network can be established and/or CCHS expands services, the following guidelines were developed to provide oral health services: • Patients must reside within Caroline, Dorchester or Talbot Counties • Services will be targeted to children who are uninsured or enrolled in HealthChoice/MA • Services for adult patients will be targeted to those with emergencies or are referred by medical providers for chronic illness (i.e. HIV, diabetes, etc.) or pregnancy
Lack of Specialty Care • No services were available on the Eastern Shore for children who require oral rehabilitation under general anesthesia prior to CCHS’s hospital-based pediatric dental program • To accommodate the surgical and restorative needs of young children locally, the existing hospital-based dental services will need to be increased to at least one day per week.
Why are we still seeing so much disease? • “Decay will happen anyway” • “Baby teeth are not important” • “The bottle keeps my baby quiet”
Measurable Outcomes • By 2008, at least 50 percent of low-income children in Dorchester County will have received preventive dental service during the past year. Baseline: 36.7 % in 2003 Healthy People 2010 Goal: 57% • By 2010, reduce the proportion of untreated dental decay in 6 to 8 year old children on the Eastern Shore to no more than 40 percent. Baseline: 72 % in 2001 Healthy People 2010 Goal: 21%
So how are we doing?? • A dental home has been built and 663 children have visited for 1143 visits (91%MA) • The hospital-based dental program has now added a second full day in the OR each month and over 40 children have received dental surgery at DGH • A dental hygienist/oral health educator has provided ECC prevention in-services to medical providers in three of our health center’s primary care offices, established many community linkages and assembled a referral tool box
Replication • Stakeholders need to be identified (some are not traditional) • Meetings must be well attended – have food! • Strong partnerships must be cultivated then nurtured • Substantial data must be collected • Determine what health needs are a priority to the community • HRSA does not have a plethora of evaluation data, so we think CROC data will be welcome
Sustainability • CCHS’s application to the Maryland Community Health Resources Commission was awarded • These monies will be used to expand our Cambridge dental office from three to seven treatment rooms and recruit a case worker to optimize OR utilization
Scott Wolpin, DMD Chief Dental Officer Choptank Community Health System Federalsburg, Maryland 410.754.7583 swolpin@choptankhealth.org