King's College London Dental Institute, Guy's, King's College and St Thomas' Hospitals, London SE5 9RW, UK.
Br Dent J. 2010 Feb 13;208(3):E6; discussion 116-7. doi: 10.1038/sj.bdj.2010.106. Epub 2010 Feb 5.
There is an urgent need to consider the skill-mix of the dental team to meet the oral health needs and demands of the population in general, and older people in particular. As people live longer and retain their teeth there will be a progressive change in both the volume and type of dental care required, and the demand for care. Operational research modelling provides the opportunity to examine and test future scenarios for National Health Service (NHS) care.
The aim of this research was to explore the required skill-mix of the dental team to meet future need and demand of older people in England to 2028 utilising operational research methods and to examine a range of future scenarios.
A three-stage computer model was developed to consider demand for dental care, workforce supply and skill-mix. First, the demand model combined population demography and a marker of oral health with attendance and treatment rates based on NHS activity data. Monte Carlo simulation was used to give an indication of the uncertainty surrounding this projected demand. Second, projections on workforce supply and other assumptions relating to clinical hours, NHS commitment and workforce whole time equivalents (WTEs) were analysed to produce a range of estimates for the current and future workforce. Third, staff skill-mix competencies were examined and the data fed into an optimisation model. Linear programming was used to give the optimal workforce makeup and predictions for workforce requirements. Five future scenarios were run from 'no skill-mix' through to 'maximum skill-mix' in the dental team, and the outputs compared.
The results indicate that by 2028 there will be an increase in demand for care among older people of over 80% to almost 8.8 million hours; however, Monte Carlo simulation suggests considerable uncertainty surrounding the demand model outputs with demand deviating from the average in terms of treatment hours by as much as 22%. Modelling a healthcare system with 'no skill-mix' resulted in the lowest volume of clinical staff equivalents (dentists: 8,668) providing care for older people, whereas maximum skill-mix involved more staff (clinical staff = 10,337, of whom 2,623 were dentists, 4,180 hygienist/therapists and 3,534 clinical dental technicians) if all care is provided at the relevant level of competence.
The model suggests that with widening skill-mix, dental care professionals can play a major role in building dental care capacity for older people in future. The implications for health policy, professional bodies and dental teamworking are discussed.
迫切需要考虑牙科团队的技能组合,以满足一般人群、尤其是老年人的口腔健康需求。随着人们寿命的延长和牙齿的保留,所需牙科护理的数量和类型以及对护理的需求都将发生渐进性变化。运营研究模型为检验和测试国民保健服务(NHS)未来护理方案提供了机会。
本研究旨在利用运营研究方法探索满足英格兰未来老年人对牙科护理的需求和需求所需的牙科团队所需的技能组合,并研究一系列未来方案。
开发了一个三阶段的计算机模型,以考虑牙科护理需求、劳动力供应和技能组合。首先,需求模型将人口统计学和口腔健康标志物与基于 NHS 活动数据的就诊率和治疗率相结合。蒙特卡罗模拟用于给出该预测需求的不确定性的指示。其次,分析了劳动力供应的预测以及与临床工作时间、NHS 承诺和劳动力全职等效(WTE)相关的其他假设,以产生当前和未来劳动力的一系列估计值。第三,检查员工技能组合能力,并将数据输入优化模型。线性规划用于提供最佳的劳动力构成和对劳动力需求的预测。从“没有技能组合”到“牙科团队中的最大技能组合”,运行了五个未来方案,并对结果进行了比较。
结果表明,到 2028 年,80 岁以上老年人的护理需求将增加超过 80%,达到近 880 万小时;然而,蒙特卡罗模拟表明,需求模型的输出存在很大的不确定性,治疗小时数与平均值相差高达 22%。对没有技能组合的医疗保健系统进行建模会导致为老年人提供护理的临床人员等效人数(牙医:8668)最少,而在最大技能组合中,涉及更多的人员(临床人员= 10337,其中 2623 人是牙医,4180 人是洁牙师/治疗师,3534 人是临床牙科技术人员)如果所有护理都在相关能力水平提供。
该模型表明,随着技能组合的扩大,牙科保健专业人员可以在未来为老年人的牙科保健能力建设中发挥重要作用。讨论了对卫生政策、专业机构和牙科团队合作的影响。