Senturia Kirsten, Fiset Louis, Hort Kim, Huebner Colleen, Mallott Elizabeth, Milgrom Peter, Nelson Lonnie, Parrish Canada, Cunha-Cruz Joana
Department of Health Services, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Department of Oral Health Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2018 Aug;46(4):416-424. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12385. Epub 2018 Jun 4.
Isolated villages in Alaska face disparities in oral health and access to care. Dental health aides such as the primary dental health aide (PDHA) and the dental health therapist (DHAT) fill a critical role for providing dental care in Alaska. Our objective was to describe strengths and barriers to paediatric dental care for children living in remote Alaska villages from the perspectives of the community and the health care system.
This qualitative study collected data through semi-structured key informant interviews with community members (n = 19) and healthcare workers (n = 19) and focus groups with patients (n = 31 adolescents and 16 caregivers of children under 12 years) living in or providing health care to 3 remote villages in Alaska. Using an inductively developed codebook and a narrative approach, 3 researchers independently read and thematically analysed the transcripts.
Two themes emerged: (i) PDHAs and DHATs are perceived as sustainable and strongly positioned to meet the unique dental needs of the rural communities; (ii) PDHAs and DHATs face barriers that limit their effectiveness, and their distinct roles require clarification and administrative support.
Dental health aides, both PDHAs and DHATs, are well accepted in Alaska villages. An innate understanding of cultural norms and continuity of care are key elements driving village satisfaction. The potential exists administratively to strengthen the model with the implementation of clinical and office-system strategies to increase efficiency of the dental team. Culturally adapted implementation strategies will be critical to the successful expansion of new workforce models that are addressing health disparities.
阿拉斯加的偏远村庄在口腔健康和获得医疗服务方面存在差异。初级口腔保健助理(PDHA)和口腔保健治疗师(DHAT)等口腔保健助手在阿拉斯加提供口腔护理方面发挥着关键作用。我们的目的是从社区和医疗保健系统的角度描述阿拉斯加偏远村庄儿童口腔保健的优势和障碍。
这项定性研究通过对社区成员(n = 19)和医护人员(n = 19)进行半结构化关键信息访谈,以及对居住在阿拉斯加3个偏远村庄或为其提供医疗服务的患者(n = 31名青少年和16名12岁以下儿童的照顾者)进行焦点小组访谈来收集数据。3名研究人员使用归纳开发的编码手册和叙述性方法,独立阅读并对转录本进行主题分析。
出现了两个主题:(i)PDHA和DHAT被认为具有可持续性,并且在满足农村社区独特的口腔需求方面具有很强的地位;(ii)PDHA和DHAT面临限制其有效性的障碍,它们的不同角色需要明确和行政支持。
PDHA和DHAT这两种口腔保健助手在阿拉斯加村庄很受欢迎。对文化规范的内在理解和护理的连续性是提高村庄满意度的关键因素。在行政上,有可能通过实施临床和办公系统策略来加强该模式,以提高口腔医疗团队的效率。文化适应性实施策略对于成功扩展解决健康差异问题的新劳动力模式至关重要。