WHO Collaborating Centre in Oral Health Inequalities and Public Health, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK.
Division of Child and Public Dental Health, Dublin Dental University Hospital, Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Lancet. 2019 Jul 20;394(10194):261-272. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(19)31133-X.
Oral diseases are a major global public health problem affecting over 3·5 billion people. However, dentistry has so far been unable to tackle this problem. A fundamentally different approach is now needed. In this second of two papers in a Series on oral health, we present a critique of dentistry, highlighting its key limitations and the urgent need for system reform. In high-income countries, the current treatment-dominated, increasingly high-technology, interventionist, and specialised approach is not tackling the underlying causes of disease and is not addressing inequalities in oral health. In low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), the limitations of so-called westernised dentistry are at their most acute; dentistry is often unavailable, unaffordable, and inappropriate for the majority of these populations, but particularly the rural poor. Rather than being isolated and separated from the mainstream health-care system, dentistry needs to be more integrated, in particular with primary care services. The global drive for universal health coverage provides an ideal opportunity for this integration. Dental care systems should focus more on promoting and maintaining oral health and achieving greater oral health equity. Sugar, alcohol, and tobacco consumption, and their underlying social and commercial determinants, are common risk factors shared with a range of other non-communicable diseases (NCDs). Coherent and comprehensive regulation and legislation are needed to tackle these shared risk factors. In this Series paper, we focus on the need to reduce sugar consumption and describe how this can be achieved through the adoption of a range of upstream policies designed to combat the corporate strategies used by the global sugar industry to promote sugar consumption and profits. At present, the sugar industry is influencing dental research, oral health policy, and professional organisations through its well developed corporate strategies. The development of clearer and more transparent conflict of interest policies and procedures to limit and clarify the influence of the sugar industry on research, policy, and practice is needed. Combating the commercial determinants of oral diseases and other NCDs should be a major policy priority.
口腔疾病是一个全球性的重大公共卫生问题,影响着超过 35 亿人。然而,到目前为止,牙医还未能解决这个问题。现在需要一种从根本上不同的方法。在口腔健康系列的第二篇论文中,我们对牙科提出了批评,强调了其主要局限性和系统改革的迫切需要。在高收入国家,目前以治疗为主导、日益高科技、干预性和专业化的方法并没有解决疾病的根本原因,也没有解决口腔健康方面的不平等问题。在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs),所谓的西化牙科的局限性最为突出;牙科往往无法获得、负担不起,而且不适合这些人群中的大多数,特别是农村贫困人口。牙科需要更加整合,特别是与初级保健服务整合,而不是与主流医疗保健系统隔离和分离。全球普及全民健康覆盖的努力为此提供了一个理想的机会。牙科保健系统应更加注重促进和维护口腔健康,并实现更大的口腔健康公平。糖、酒精和烟草的消费,以及它们背后的社会和商业决定因素,是与一系列其他非传染性疾病(NCDs)共同的风险因素。需要采取协调一致的全面监管和立法措施来解决这些共同的风险因素。在本系列论文中,我们重点关注减少糖消费的必要性,并描述如何通过采用一系列旨在打击全球糖业为促进糖消费和利润而采用的企业战略的上游政策来实现这一目标。目前,糖业通过其发达的企业战略影响着牙科研究、口腔健康政策和专业组织。需要制定更清晰和更透明的利益冲突政策和程序,以限制和澄清糖业对研究、政策和实践的影响。打击口腔疾病和其他非传染性疾病的商业决定因素应成为一项主要政策优先事项。