University of Washington School of Dentistry, Seattle, Washington.
University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, Washington.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2019 Dec;47(6):502-512. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12492. Epub 2019 Aug 29.
Dental therapists deliver preventive and basic restorative care and have been practicing since 2006 in Alaska's Yukon-Kuskokwim (YK) Delta. In this qualitative programme evaluation, we documented health providers' and community members' experiences with dental therapy. The goal of the evaluation was to develop a conceptual model of dental care delivery in Alaska Native Communities centred on dental therapists.
We developed semi-structured interview scripts and used snowball sampling to recruit 16 health providers with experience providing care in the YK Delta and 125 community members from six YK Delta Communities in 2017 and 2018. The six communities were a stratified convenience sample based on community-level exposure to dental therapists (high, medium and no exposure). Interview data were digitally recorded, transcribed, verified for accuracy and coded inductively into conceptual domains using content analytic methods.
Providers believed individuals living in the YK Delta have benefited from clinic-based restorative care and community-based education provided by dental therapists. The restricted scope of dental therapy practice limits the complexity of care that may be offered to patients. However, community members expressed high satisfaction with the quality of care provided by dental therapists. Community members noted more widespread knowledge and evolving norms about oral health and believed dental therapists are helping to prevent disease and improve quality of life. Participants believed access to dental care for children has improved over the years, but felt that many adults in the YK Delta continue to have unmet needs. A potential barrier to sustained programme effectiveness is low retention of dental therapists in the region, driven primarily by reports that dental therapists feel overworked, stressed and geographically isolated.
Dental therapists have contributed to the dental care delivery system in Alaska's YK Delta. Future opportunities remain within the system to address the needs of adults, develop strategies to retain dental therapists in the region and incorporate evidence-based, prevention-oriented strategies to improve oral health behaviours and reduce oral diseases.
牙医治疗师提供预防和基本修复护理,自 2006 年以来一直在阿拉斯加的育空-科尤库克(YK)三角洲地区行医。在这项定性计划评估中,我们记录了卫生保健提供者和社区成员对牙科治疗的经验。评估的目的是开发一个以牙科治疗师为中心的阿拉斯加原住民社区牙科护理交付概念模型。
我们制定了半结构化访谈脚本,并使用滚雪球抽样方法,于 2017 年和 2018 年从 YK 三角洲的六个社区招募了 16 名有在 YK 三角洲提供护理经验的卫生保健提供者和 125 名社区成员。这六个社区是根据社区接触牙科治疗师的程度(高、中、无接触)进行分层便利抽样的。访谈数据以数字形式记录、转录、准确性验证,并使用内容分析方法归纳为概念领域进行编码。
提供者认为生活在 YK 三角洲的个人受益于牙科治疗师提供的以诊所为基础的修复护理和以社区为基础的教育。牙科治疗实践的有限范围限制了可能向患者提供的护理的复杂性。然而,社区成员对牙科治疗师提供的护理质量表示高度满意。社区成员指出,关于口腔健康的知识更加广泛,规范也在不断演变,他们认为牙科治疗师有助于预防疾病和提高生活质量。参与者认为,多年来儿童获得牙科保健的机会有所改善,但他们认为 YK 三角洲的许多成年人仍有未满足的需求。牙科治疗师在该地区的低保留率是持续计划有效性的一个潜在障碍,主要是因为报告称牙科治疗师感到工作过度、压力大且地理位置孤立。
牙科治疗师为阿拉斯加 YK 三角洲的牙科护理提供系统做出了贡献。未来仍有机会在该系统内满足成年人的需求,制定策略留住该地区的牙科治疗师,并采用循证、以预防为导向的策略,改善口腔健康行为,减少口腔疾病。