Crall James J, Illum Jackie, Martinez Ana, Pourat Nadereh
UCLA School of Dentistry
UCLA Center for Health Policy Research
Policy Brief UCLA Cent Health Policy Res. 2016 Jun(PB2016-5):1-8.
Despite the high rate of untreated tooth decay, many young children in California under six years of age have never been to a dentist. Numerous and complex barriers to access to oral health care for young children exist, and a multifaceted approach is required to improve receipt of preventive and treatment services that could improve the oral health of this population. This policy brief describes the UCLA-First 5 LA 21st Century Dental Homes Project, which was designed to improve oral health care for young children in 12 Federally Qualified Health Center (FQHC) clinic sites with co-located dental and primary care services and its accessibility in their service areas throughout Los Angeles County. The project funded infrastructure and staffing, provided technical assistance to improve operations, trained clinical personnel to provide oral health care to young children, implemented a quality improvement learning collaborative, trained parents and child care providers in oral hygiene and healthy habits, and disseminated information to promote effective policies. Early data on the project indicated twofold increases in delivery of both diagnostics and treatment visits for young children, and a threefold increase in preventive services for young children during the program.
尽管未经治疗的龋齿发生率很高,但加利福尼亚州许多六岁以下的幼儿从未看过牙医。幼儿获得口腔保健存在诸多复杂障碍,需要采取多方面的方法来改善预防和治疗服务的提供情况,从而改善这一人群的口腔健康。本政策简报介绍了加州大学洛杉矶分校 - 洛杉矶市第一5年21世纪牙科之家项目,该项目旨在改善12个联邦合格健康中心(FQHC)诊所所在地幼儿的口腔保健,这些诊所提供牙科和初级保健服务,并提高其在洛杉矶县整个服务区的可及性。该项目为基础设施和人员配备提供资金,提供技术援助以改善运营,培训临床人员为幼儿提供口腔保健,开展质量改进学习协作,培训家长和儿童保育提供者口腔卫生和健康习惯,并传播信息以促进有效政策的实施。该项目的早期数据表明,幼儿诊断和治疗就诊次数增加了两倍,项目期间幼儿预防服务增加了三倍。