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Linking Together to Improve Oral Health through Tobacco Cessation Gayle Laszewski, MA Center for Tobacco Research & Intervention University of Wisconsin Medical School. Learning Objectives. Recognize the effect of tobacco use on oral health
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Linking Together to ImproveOral Health through Tobacco CessationGayle Laszewski, MACenter for Tobacco Research & InterventionUniversity of Wisconsin Medical School
Learning Objectives • Recognize the effect of tobacco use on oral health • Identify barriers to dental providers in addressing tobacco use • How to assist dental providers in overcoming barriers to helping patients quit tobacco
The UW Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention (UW-CTRI) • A nationally-recognized research center specializing in understanding & treating tobacco dependence • Research Center - focus on relapse prevention • Smoking Cessation Clinic • Education & Outreach - translating research into practice • Wisconsin Tobacco Quit Line
Mission of Collaborative Effort:To Promote Tobacco Cessation Education and Intervention in the Dental Setting Collaborators: Wisconsin Dental Association UW-Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention Madison Public Health Dental Services Department
First Steps of Collaborative Effort Summarized Research On... • Tobacco use and oral health • Effectiveness of dental settings for cessation interventions • Barriers to addressing tobacco use with dental patients Initiated Efforts to Overcome Identified Barriers
Tobacco & Oral Health Facts • The leading cause of oral cancer is tobacco use. • Tobacco use is a known risk factor for tooth loss. Smokers lose more teeth than non-smokers at a younger age. • Smoking is now recognized as a major risk factor for periodontitis and may be responsible for more than half of peridontitis cases among adults in the U.S. • More than 75% of American adults over age 35 have some form of periodontal disease.
Tobacco & Oral Health Facts • Teenage smokers are nearly 3 times as likely as their non-smoking peers to have gum disease in their mid-20’s. • Recent studies now link periodontal diseases to major health issues such as diabetes, heart disease, pneumonia, stroke and pre-term labor resulting in low birth weight babies. • Young children who are exposed to secondhand smoke have a much higher rate of tooth decay than children who do not grow up around smokers.
Why Dental Providers ShouldTreat Tobacco Use • Dental providers are in a unique position to SHOW patients visible effects of tobacco use. • Dental providers can be AS effective or in some studies MORE effective than physicians in helping smokers quit.
Why Dental Providers Should Treat Tobacco Use • More than 50% of smokers make an annual visit to the dentist. • Dentists/hygienists are more likely to see adults for routine care on annual basis (especially males). • General Dental Office: 2 times/year • Periodontal Office: 3-4 times/year • Patients have increased success rates in tobacco cessation with dentist/hygienist interventions.
Why Dental Providers ShouldTreat Tobacco Use • 65-72% of smokers are interested in help from their dental hygienist or dentist. • 75% of dental patients indicate a willingness to hear tobacco cessation advice from their dental provider.
ADA Recognizes the Importance of Addressing Tobacco Use • Dental code already exists (D1320) “tobacco counseling for the control and provision of oral disease” • However, code is not being reimbursed by health insurers. • Other organizations which encourage cessation interventions by dental teams: • Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality • Centers of Disease Control and Prevention • Public Health Service
Identified Barriers for Cessation Counseling in Dental Settings90% Dental providers cite not knowing how to provide an effective cessation intervention. Barriers: • Lack of Training • Lack of knowledge regarding cessation resources • Lack of Time • Lack of Reimbursement
Effective clinical interventions exist: The Public Health Service Clinical Practice Guideline: Treating Tobacco Use and Dependencewas published in June, 2000 and offers effective treatments for tobacco dependence. Educate Providers Regarding Effective Evidence Based Cessation Interventions • Creation of Tobacco and Oral Health Fact Sheet
Components of anEffective Cessation Intervention Counseling and Support/Resources Cessation medications System changes within clinic setting to address tobacco use Counseling & cessation medications can double if not triple success rates in quitting. Clinic procedures which identify tobacco users increase the likelihood of provider interventions.
The 5 A’s • ASKabout tobacco use. • ADVISEto quit. • ASSESSwillingness to make a quit attempt. • ASSISTin quit attempt. • ARRANGEfor follow-up.
Educate Providers Regarding Effectiveness of Brief Interventions “Minimal interventions lasting less than 3 minutes increase overall tobacco abstinence rates.” The PHS Guideline (Strength of Evidence = A)
Brief Interventions • Brief tobacco dependence treatment iseffective • Clinically effective • Cost effective • Should be offered to all patients at every visit
Educate Providers RegardingCessation Resources Free Telephone Cessation Counseling for Wisconsin Residents
Educate Providers RegardingCost Effectiveness and Benefits of Cessation Interventions • Cost of Cessation vs. Cost of Treatment for periodontal disease • Cost Benefit Cessation Counseling Reimbursement Handout • Smoking: • Reduces the success of both non-surgical and surgical periodontal therapy • Reduces success of oral implants • Delays healing of oral surgery sites
Next Steps Focus on #1 Barrier: Lack of Training • Standardized Evidence-Based Cessation Intervention Guideline for Dental Settings • USPHS Guideline referenced in dental journals • Accreditation thru ADA? • Current national efforts to standardize a guideline for dental settings • Integration of Cessation Interventions into Oral Health Curriculum • UW Medical School CME/CEU • Several dental schools have included cessation in their curriculum (ie. Harvard)
Next Steps A Secondary Barrier - Lack of reimbursement • Utilization of ADA code for cessation counseling (D1320) regardless of reimbursement--to familiarize insurance companies with this practice
Resources • Local Dental Societies • Bring dental providers together • Support your efforts • UW-CTRI Website: www.ctri.wisc.edu • USPHS Guideline Materials: www.surgeon general.gov/tobacco • Cessation Activities for Dental Settings: www.umn.edu/perio/tobacco/.