ADEA Supports National Oral Health Report
ADEA Supports National Oral Health Report WASHINGTON, DC—The American Dental Education Association (ADEA) welcomes the April 8 release of Advancing Oral Health in America, the first of two new reports on oral health undertaken by the Institute of Medicine (IOM).
ADEA Supports National Oral Health Report
WASHINGTON,
DC—The American Dental Education Association (ADEA) welcomes the April 8
release of Advancing Oral Health in America, the first of two new
reports on oral health undertaken by the Institute of Medicine (IOM).
Commissioned by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Health
Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), the report builds on and
supplements the 2000 Surgeon General’s Report, Oral Health in America, and
the National Call to Action to Promote Oral Health in 2003. ADEA is
greatly encouraged by the seven recommendations included in the report that, as
a whole, are referred to as the new Oral Health Initiative (NOHI).
“The IOM report is a clarion call to action, particularly in areas necessary
for successfully maintaining oral health as a public health priority: strong
leadership and the sustained interest and involvement of multiple
stakeholders,” said ADEA President Leo E. Rouse, D.D.S. “It tackles the
challenges associated with health disparities and access to care while, at the
same time, demonstrating an awareness of and sensitivity to disputed workforce
issues. Likewise, it appropriately emphasizes the important role the federal
government has in advancing the oral health of the nation.”
The report is organized on a set of principles that include, among others,
establishing high-level accountability, enhancing the role of non-dental health
care professionals, promoting collaboration among private and public stakeholders,
and advancing the goals and objectives of Healthy People 2020. It
emphasizes that HHS has the ability and the opportunity to play a vital role in
the current oral health system.
Accordingly, Advancing Oral Health in America offers the following recommendations:
1. The Secretary of HHS should give the NOHI leaders the authority
and resources needed to successfully integrate oral health into the planning,
programming, policy, and research that occurs across all HHS agencies and
programs.
2. All relevant HHS agencies should promote and monitor the use of
evidence-based preventive services in oral health (both clinical and
community-based) and counseling across the life span.
3. All relevant HHS agencies should undertake oral health literacy
and education efforts aimed at individuals, communities, and health care
professionals.
4. HHS should invest in workforce innovations to improve oral
health that focus on core competency development, education, and training to
allow for the use of all health care professionals in oral health care;
interprofessional, team-based approaches to the prevention and treatment of
oral diseases; better use of new and existing oral health care professionals;
and increasing the diversity and improving the cultural competence of the
workforce providing oral health care.
5. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) should
explore new delivery and payment models for Medicare, Medicaid, and the
Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) to improve access, quality, and
coverage of oral health care across the life span.
6. HHS should place a high priority on efforts to improve open,
actionable, and timely information to advance science and improve oral health
care through research.
7. To evaluate the NOHI, leaders should convene an annual public
meeting of federal agency heads to report on progress.
Federal activities focused on oral health are seriously fragmented among
various government agencies and programs. ADEA applauds the considered and
realistic approach of Advancing Oral Health in America to improving
coordination and integration of oral health programs throughout federal
government. When successful, this effort will maximize limited resources to
have the greatest impact.
ADEA believes Advancing Oral Health in America will appreciably heighten
awareness of the importance and value of oral health. Like its predecessor, the
Surgeon General’s report, it will inevitably raise the profile of oral health
among the public, policymakers, and elected officials. That will be, in itself,
a significant achievement.
Advancing Oral Health in America can be accessed at www.iom.edu/Reports/2011/Advancing-Oral-Health-in-America.aspx <http://www.iom.edu/Reports/2011/Advancing-Oral-Health-in-America.aspx>
.