Dental clinics serving two Oregon tribes have been authorized to hire dental health aide therapists to help expand care for their patients.
Dental clinics serving two Oregon tribes have been authorized to hire dental health aide therapists to help expand care for their patients.
The Oregon Health Authority (OHA) on Feb. 8, 2016, approved a pilot that will allow health clinics and centers serving two tribes in the state—the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians and the Coquille Indian Tribe—to hire dental therapists to help expand access to care.
The Northwest Portland Area Indian Health Board (NPAIHB) has partnered with the two tribes on the pilot, which is made possible by a 2011 Oregon law that supports innovative and data-driven improvements to the state’s oral health care system.
These midlevel providers will work under the supervision of a dentist to help respond to the unmet need for preventive and routine restorative care, such as filling cavities, placing temporary crowns, and extracting badly diseased or loose teeth.
The project marks the first time dental therapists will work in Oregon, but they are active elsewhere in the country—with a notable record of expanding access to care:
Research from around the globe shows that dental therapists offer high-quality, cost-effective treatment, improving access especially in places where dentists are scarce.1 They receive two years of rigorous education and are required to have as much clinical experience as dentists for the limited number of procedures they perform. Further, a growing body of evidence demonstrates that they deliver safe and reliable care: More than 1,000 studies from across the globe found no quality concerns for these midlevel providers.2
Oregon tribal members served by the clinics that will hire dental therapists stand to benefit immensely. American Indians suffer from the poorest oral health of any population in the United States, with staggering rates of untreated tooth decay among children and of untreated decay and gum disease among adults.
If the pilot is successful and dentists statewide are allowed to hire similar providers, many more Oregonians could see their access to care improve. More than 1 million state residents live in areas with a shortage of dentists,3 and tooth decay is widespread. More than half of children ages 6-9 had decay in 2012, and 20 percent of children had dental caries that went untreated.4
Several other states are also considering legislation and additional proposals to authorize midlevel providers.
John Grant directs and Nate Myszka oversees state children’s dental policy campaigns at The Pew Charitable Trusts.