Native Americans suffer from the poorest oral health of any population in the United States, with staggering rates of untreated tooth decay among children and untreated decay and gum disease among adults.
4x Preschool-aged Native American children had four times more cases of untreated tooth decay than white children—43 percent compared with 11 percent.1
68% Native Americans ages 35 to 44 that had untreated decay in 1999, the most recent year for which nationwide data are available. This is more than twice the 2011 rate of 27 percent among all adults in the U.S. Forty-three percent of Native Americans in this age group had both untreated decay and periodontal disease.2
97% Adults on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota—one of the largest in the country—that had untreated decay in 2011, and 68 percent had gum disease.3
$99 The U.S. Indian Health Service spent an average of only $99 per person on dental care in 2009, compared with average per capita spending of $272 nationwide.4
2.4 Million Native Americans suffer from poor oral health because of a lack of available dentists: In 2014, more than 2.4 million Native Americans lived in counties with dental care shortage areas, and half of all Native American children lived in a shortage area.5
Since 2004, Alaska Native tribal governments have used midlevel dental providers to address the dental care needs in their communities. Dental health aide therapists (DHATs) provide preventive and routine restorative care, such as filling cavities and performing uncomplicated extractions. DHATs train for two years and can work in the same location as their supervising dentist or in remote locations, with supervision and consultation provided by the dentist using telehealth technology. This makes it easier to provide continuity of care and oral health education in rural villages, often DHATs’ home communities. But before they can be certified to practice offsite, DHATs must gain at least three months of additional clinical experience under the direct supervision of a dentist.
More than 40,000 Alaska Native people living in 81 previously unserved or underserved rural communities have regular access to dental care thanks to the addition of DHATs to dentists’ teams.6 No malpractice claims have ever been filed against a DHAT.7
Because DHATs perform only a small number of the most commonly needed routine procedures, their rigorous training can be completed in two years.8 They also earn lower salaries than dentists, which allows tribal dental clinics to care for more patients, in an affordable way, while enabling dentists to focus their efforts on more complex needs and procedures.9 In one case study, two DHATs generated more than $216,000 in estimated net revenue after accounting for employment costs, including full-time dental assistants.10 This frees up resources that can be reinvested in clinics and in expanded services.