Chapter 2 - Current and future dental care needs
2.1
The need for quality dental care is an issue
that is relevant to all Australians. The cost associated with providing this
dental care is likewise a universal issue, affecting individuals in respect of
the dental treatment they seek and affecting the whole community in the context
of its wider costs. For example:
- national expenditure on dental services in 1994-95 was $1.94
billion;[1]
- it was estimated that in 1983 there were one million days work
lost and over three million days of limited activity, associated with oral
disease in the Australian population;[2]
- the NSW Dental Health Branch estimated that the cost of oral
disease to the NSW community alone in 1995 approached $500million;[3]
- oral disease in Australia ranks among the most frequently
experienced illness episodes;[4]
- dental disease is almost entirely preventable and the costs of
these preventative measures are insignificant when compared with the costs of
providing restorative care;[5]
- dental health is essential for good nutritional status and poor
diet is one of the main causes of poor health in Australia (60 per cent of
deaths in Australia are diet-related);[6]
and
- recent research in the United States of America indicates a
strong correlation between periodontal disease and heart attack.[7]
2.2
In quoting oral health statistics here and
elsewhere in the report, the Committee notes that, with the exception of some
data collected across the years 1994 to 1996 under the Commonwealth Dental
Health Program (CDHP), much of the national data dates back to 1983 and the
last Australian oral health survey.
Oral health and general health
2.3
Oral health is concerned with the well-being of
the mouth and its structures including the teeth, tongue, jaws, supporting
tissues and salivary glands. Poor oral health has a range of consequences
including pain, difficulty in eating and the avoidance of certain foods (which
can lead to wider health problems), impaired speech, loss of self esteem,
restricting social and community participation, and impeding the ability to
gain employment. Generally, a person’s overall quality of life is affected.
2.4
Dr Deborah Cole, Director of the Royal Dental
Hospital of Melbourne, referred to some of the consequences of poor dental
health:
... It horrifies me that many people, especially decision makers,
have no realisation of the dental consequences for the financially
disadvantaged. These people with their broken down mouths have their job
prospects diminished, are more likely to have problems dealing with landlords, bank
managers, the police, doctors, lawyers and many other people they come into
contact with in their daily lives. The value judgements that all these people
make on a daily basis ... come into effect to help these people stay in the
poverty trap.[8]
2.5
The Committee was advised that although there
are many diseases that affect the mouth, the two most common, and hence those
constituting the major public health problem, are tooth decay (dental caries)
and periodontal diseases, which affect the gums and tooth supporting
structures. While dental caries has decreased in prevalence in the past 20
years (although remaining a major health and social problem), the need for
periodontal maintenance programs are becoming more evident as more people
retain their teeth. Both diseases are largely preventable.[9]
2.6
Oral disease has traditionally been treated and
funded separately from other medical conditions. However, the interrelationship
between oral health and the health of the whole body was constantly emphasised
in evidence. Oral health should be recognised as an essential and integrated
component of general health.[10]
Dr Martin Dooland, of Dental Health Services Victoria (DHSV), stated in
evidence that the link between oral and general health is most obvious from
dentally compromised patients and most dramatic for life-threatening oral
conditions. Dr Dooland noted, however, that ‘the general health of over five
million concession card holders is being damaged in less startling but very
real ways by their poor and uneven access to basic oral health care, unlike the
access they have to government subsidised medical care for other conditions’.[11]
Groups with particular disadvantage
2.7
While the need for dental care is universal,
certain people within Australian society are currently in greater need than
others due to a range of barriers preventing them maintaining a desirable level
of oral health. This is encapsulated in the finding of the Australian Institute
of Health and Welfare (AIHW) Dental Statistics and Research Unit that:
Research regarding variation in dental health within the adult
community has highlighted manifest social inequalities in dental health status
and access to basic dental care in the Australian adult population.[12]
2.8
It is important to note that, while rates of
dental disease may vary due to factors such as the presence or absence of
fluoridated water, low income earners and other disadvantaged groups have
similar patterns of dental disease to the general population. The Victorian
Government submitted that ‘the major difference between these two groups is not
so much in the experience of oral disease, but in access to and experience of
treatment’.[13]
2.9
People disadvantaged in terms of their
experience of dental care can be categorised as belonging to a number of broad
groupings within Australian society. It must be remembered, however, that as
individuals, they may suffer a range of disadvantages which apply to a number
of groupings. For instance, as well as being a low income earner, a person
might also live in a remote area and suffer the dental complications of a major
illness. In such circumstances, their problems are compounded.
2.10
The most disadvantaged groups, as raised in
evidence before the Committee, are addressed below.
Low income earners, including
Health Card holders
2.11
The overwhelming weight of evidence before the
Committee pointed to low income earners and their dependants as a significantly
disadvantaged group in the area of dental health.
2.12
This group was generally seen as including those
people who are eligible for health care cards and, therefore, publicly funded
dental care. These are people who have a Pensioner Concession Card, Health
Benefits Card, Health Care Card or Commonwealth Seniors’ Health Card.[14] The Tasmanian Dental Service
noted that Health Card Holders are receiving nearly twice as many extractions
as the rest of the community, even though their underlying dental disease rate
is not significantly higher.[15]
2.13
Research undertaken into the oral health status
of low income earners indicates a significant level of inequality when compared
with the rest of the population. In his evidence Professor John Spencer,
Director of the AIHW Dental Statistics and Research Unit, summarised the range
of factors which are generally accepted as characterising the standard of oral
health and treatment. When applied to this portion of the population they
become indicators of inequality:
Certainly in incomes below $20,000 per year, we start to see the
highest levels of perceived need: experience of both ... toothache and inability
to chew and eat all foods – those sorts of issues. We see the higher rate of
problem or emergency visiting. We see the higher rate of extractions. We see
the lower rate of restorations. We see the groups with longer intervals between
their dental visits, including five years or more between dental visits.[16]
2.14
The following statistics illustrate these
inequalities:
- People aged 45-64 with the lowest quintile of household income[17]
are eight times more likely to have no natural teeth and 1.7 times more likely
to wear a denture, than people from the wealthiest quintile.
- Health Card holders aged 45 and over are more than 1.7 times more
likely to be edentulous (without teeth) and 1.4 times more likely to wear a
denture than non health card holders.
- Dentate Card holders aged 45-64 report having an average of five
more missing teeth than non health card holders.
- Dentate people from the lowest income quintile are 2.4 times as
likely as those from the highest quintile to have attended a dentist as long
ago as five or more years.[18]
- People from disadvantaged backgrounds are more likely to have
poor oral health than the general population and are about twice as likely to
have lost their natural teeth.[19]
- Among those whose last dental visit was in response to a dental
problem, the group with the highest extraction rate – Card holders whose last
visit was to a public clinic – had the lowest filling rate. Fillings are
restorative whereas extractions are the equivalent of dental morbidity. The
group with the lowest extraction rate – non Card holders whose last visit was
to a private clinic – had the highest filling rate. People visiting for a
checkup within the private sector were more likely to receive restorative care
than those who last visited a public clinic.[20]
2.15
In 1996 it was estimated that of people who went
to a private dentist, over 94 per cent of those who went for a checkup and
nearly 97 per cent of those who went for a problem, were seen within one
month. Public patients had a less favourable outcome. Only 65.9 per cent
of those with problems and 47.5 per cent of those going for a checkup were
seen within one month. Some 6.2 per cent of those with problems and
21.1 per cent of those seeking a checkup reported that they had to wait
for 12 months or longer.[21]
2.16
The Committee also noted compelling evidence
that the reason a person visits a dental service influences a person’s oral
health outcomes. People who present with a pre-existing problem are less likely
to receive preventative services and more likely to lose their teeth.[22] Low income earners and their
dependants are more likely to be in a situation where irregular, emergency
dental treatment and poor oral health predominate.
2.17
Dr Cole, encapsulated the problem of oral health
for low income people, stating that:
Australia is now a country where you can pick the poor by their
teeth.[23]
2.18
This assertion was borne out by a survey
conducted through the South Australian Council of Social Service (SACOSS). That
survey, conducted in October – November 1997, collected information on a range
of dental health issues relating to low income clients of financial counselling
and emergency relief agencies. Its question ‘Do you have any comments about
getting dental care?’ elicited responses which included the following:
You can’t get any except for emergency
and then all they do is pull them out.
It’s too expensive.
I have given up on my teeth because
the waiting lists are so long. I haven’t even bothered to get myself on the
list, I figure my teeth will have fallen out by then.
I live in fear of having a toothache and not being able to
afford a dentist. I am also looking for work and trying to look as presentable
as possible and my teeth have needed cleaning for over 3 years. I would be
willing to help with some of the payments if I knew that help was available
when required.[24]
2.19
The survey found that nearly 60 per cent of
the survey group had experienced toothache within the last twelve months
compared with an incidence of about 11 per cent for non health care
cardholders. About 25 per cent had visited a dentist in the previous 12
months and 25 per cent had not visited a dentist for more than three
years. Some 50.8 per cent of respondents needed dental care urgently,
26 per cent reported associated health problems due to dental problems and
59 per cent of people on waiting lists for dental care had been on the
waiting list for more than two years.[25]
2.20
The major barrier to low income earners seeking
dental care is its cost. For many Australians the cost of private dental care
is prohibitive, as attested to by the many submissions received by the
Committee from individuals dependant on the public system. The Shop,
Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association (SDA) put the widely accepted
view that for low income families private health insurance to cover oral health
services ‘is simply not an option at all’.[26]
2.21
The Victorian Dental Therapists Association
noted the higher burden of dental disease suffered by lower socio-economic
groups, quoting a study in 1997:
There is a positive relationship between income and dental visits.
Dental practitioners have the highest fees of any ancillary health service for
a standard session, and ancillary health insurance returns only half of the
cost of dental visits. It does not, therefore, remove the income barrier of
out-of-pocket costs to obtaining care, which represents a much higher
proportion of a low earner’s income.[27]
2.22
Those reliant on the public system, however, are
unlikely to receive treatment comparable to that of private patients.
Compelling evidence was presented to the Committee reinforcing this claim. At
the present time in the public system there is an increasing emphasis placed on
meeting the demand for emergency care rather than restorative and preventative
care, which would have longer term benefits for patients. Evidence received by
the Committee indicated that this emphasis was a necessity resulting from
financial limitations. Some patients are only treated for emergency matters as
the waiting lists are so long that appointments for checkups are superseded by
emergencies. It has been reported that in some areas waiting lists stretch to
years rather than months and some have been closed so there is no access to
public dental services. Further, public dental services do not provide a full
range of dental treatment.[28]
The current status of waiting lists in the public dental system is addressed in
detail in Chapter 3.
2.23
The Brotherhood of St Laurence (BSL) submitted
that its research findings:
... indicate a strong relationship between income status and
dental health status. Whilst a similar relationship may also be found with
other health problems, such as heart disease and some cancers, what marks
dental health services as different from other health services is that the
relationship between income and poor health reflects lack of access to
appropriate treatment. Moreover, that lack of access must be seen in
longitudinal terms; it is not merely a question of lack of access now but also
the effects of lack of access in the past.[29]
2.24
The Committee notes that lack of access now will
have a continuing impact on this group’s future oral health status and the
level of demand for public care. Extended periods of poor access to dental care
which could prevent dental disease, will compound their problems in the future.
The Brotherhood referred to a ‘perpetuation of disadvantage’,[30] which, on the basis of the
evidence before the Committee, appears to be an apt description of the
circumstances in which many low income earners find themselves.
2.25
Evidence was also received which indicated that
many doctors report patients attending for dental problems in order to obtain
pain relief or antibiotics. According to the Australian Catholic Social Welfare
Commission:
It is doubtful whether the abolition of the programme [the CDHP]
is even achieving its fiscal goal, since people with chronic pain due to oral
health problems are now going to doctors as their first port of call and
receiving prescriptions for pain-killers. The uncapped Medical Benefits and
Pharmaceutical Benefits Schemes are therefore picking up much of the cost of
the abolition of the CDHP.[31]
2.26
The Committee was informed that some people
visited their doctor for pain relief when they had toothache and for
antibiotics when they had infections and it was noted that prescription
painkillers are cheaper than ones bought over the counter. Such channelling of
dental problems into the general medical sphere places a burden on the Medicare
and Pharmaceutical Benefits Schemes as well as being, at best, a short term
solution. Doctors are only be able to treat the symptoms rather than the
problem, so that patients would eventually require dental treatment.[32]
2.27
Without doubt the cost of adequate dental care
combined with the limitations of the current public dental system mean that
many low income earners and their dependants have a standard of oral health
which is inferior in comparison when compared with the general population.
2.28
This is not a problem which will diminish
without intervention. Evidence was received from the Consumers’ Health Forum of
Australia (CHF) that:
... the number of people on low income relying on publicly
subsidised dental health services is likely to increase gradually but
substantially in the coming years. Demographic factors behind this increase
include not only the ageing of the population, but also trends suggesting that
the proportion of the population in the paid workforce may decline, leading to
an increase in the number of employed persons on low incomes. Therefore, the
number of people unable to access or afford privately funded dental health
services is likely to comprise a significant proportion of the population in
years to come.[33]
Preschoolers and young adults as
specific target groups
2.29
The Committee received evidence that, within the
broad grouping of Australians dependant on low incomes, two groups of young
Australians were at specific risk of dental problems. These were preschool
children and young adults.
2.30
Evidence before the Committee indicated that the
dental health of Australian children has improved dramatically in the last 30 years
and the average amount of decay in the permanent teeth of twelve year old
children has fallen. Nevertheless, 30 per cent of children enter primary
school with untreated dental decay and less than a third of 2-4 year olds have
visited a dentist. A small but significant proportion of preschoolers suffer
very severe and extensive dental decay requiring hospitalisation and treatment
under general anaesthetic.[34]
Dr Dooland of DHSV gave evidence that this is a nutrition issue:
It is particularly so with low-income groups, particularly
single parents, from pacifying children with sweet liquids, even milk, for
extended periods at night-time. That damages the teeth in a very great way.
Providing information to young mothers and pregnant mothers, targeted identification
of those children and making sure that they get early management are the
economical way of handling those peaks of need.[35]
2.31
The BSL referred to the fact that the oral
health of young Australians as a group is more comparable than the oral health
status of adults due to a range of factors including fluoridation and school
dental clinics (ie. there is more commonality across socio-economic groups).
The Brotherhood also pointed to the period of transition to adulthood, however,
as a period when lack of access, affordability, unemployment or low paid work
intervene to undermine these benefits.[36]
Lack of regular dental care and changes in lifestyle have led to a
deterioration in dental health for some young adults, particularly for low
income earners.[37]
Professor Spencer, of the AIHW, advised the Committee that:
Young adults seem to be at risk of using emergency dental
services and of receiving extractions when they use dental services,
particularly those that are eligible for public sector dental care. The school
dental service carries children through to the end of their eligibility in a
state of good dental health – among the best in the world... As soon as they
leave that service, though, the sorts of problems that exist in the community
at large with accessing dental care re-emerge. There is a deterioration in oral
health of young adults as lifestyle changes occur. Certainly we find that those
who have come from less privileged backgrounds, those that are unemployed, have
really quite high rates of dental decay. The problem is carrying forward the
gains that have been made among children and adolescents really into young
adults.[38]
Aged people
2.32
Many of Australia’s elderly people are on low
incomes and subject to the disadvantages described above. In addition, older
Australians face a range of other problems in accessing dental care, for
instance due to illness or restricted mobility.
2.33
The Committee noted that some elderly
Australians are entitled to dental treatment due to their status as veterans or
war widow/ers. This status gives them access to free treatment for basic
services, although there is a financial limit on the provision of some
services.
2.34
There is a strong correlation between age and
low income. Private income decreases with age and affordability of dental
health services is a critical issue for the elderly. Evidence received from the
Council on the Ageing (COTA) indicated that over 70 per cent of
Australians aged over 65 (ie. 1.7 million people in 1997) rely on part or full
age pensions. This put most single older people on a pension income of between
$160 and $199 per week and older married couples on the pension receive an
income of $200 to $400 per week. By contrast, a recent survey of COTA members
indicated that their members had been quoted costs for dental work ranging from
$600 to $2 000 for replacement dentures and a similar range of costs for
bridges, crowns and other maintenance work.[39]
2.35
Private dental care has become less affordable
and the Victorian Government, in its submission, cited the fact that between
1985 and 1996 the cost of an average course of treatment has increased by
25 per cent more than social security payments.[40] Evidence was also received
from Aged Care Australia (ACA), that the ability of older people to pay for
dental services has diminished due to the introduction of user contributions
towards the cost of aged care services and the higher contribution for
medications.[41]
COTA also noted that older people on a pension have little capacity for saving
for large cost items and that their capacity to contribute to the cost of
dental care is very limited.[42]
2.36
The distress caused to elderly Australians who
may have difficulty affording adequate dental care at an age when oral health
affects the quality of life so greatly, was evidenced by some of the anecdotal
comments contained in individual submissions to the Committee:
I am appalled at what I have to pay
to have my remaining teeth attended to ... Pensioners are being held to ransom by
the dentists ...[43]
... it is humiliating to have to beg
our political masters to alleviate our suffering. Perhaps they could ... use the
hundreds of millions from the National Welfare Fund which we former workers
compulsorily contributed to ...[44]
... I ... have fought hard all my life to retain my teeth, by having
regular check-ups, etc. Now it seems that at an age when I should be receiving
more care, there is much less help available.[45]
2.37
As Australia’s population is ageing the needs of
the elderly in maintaining a good standard of oral health will require more
emphasis. In future, the percentage of older Australians within the total
population will continue to grow as will the number dependant on public dental
services. At present 13 per cent of the population is over 65 years of age
and it is estimated that by the year 2010 this figure will have risen to over
22 per cent.[46]
In Victoria, the Metropolitan Hospitals Planning Board estimated in 1995 that
Victoria’s aged population would increase by 30 per cent in the next
fifteen years.[47]
2.38
There is a trend towards increased retention of
teeth by older people. This brings with it increased caries (tooth decay) and
periodontal disease and an increased need for dental care.[48] An AIHW report has found that:
... the number of natural teeth in people aged 65 and over in 1994
was 62.1 per cent more than it was in people 65 and over in 1989 (Carter
et al. 1995). The combination of changes in age distribution and declines in
tooth loss is thus likely to result in an increase in demand for dental care by
older Australians.[49]
2.39
The proportion of elderly people who are
edentulous is rapidly shrinking and it is estimated that by 2020 only about
20 per cent of the elderly will have full upper and lower dentures.[50] The Committee also received
evidence from COTA indicating that the number of people with dementia is
increasing and that, in future, more people with dementia will have their own
teeth.[51]
This will translate into difficulties of care and more people in need of
special dental assistance.
2.40
The Australian Dental Association (ADA)
submitted that:
... twenty years ago, dental treatment for the over seventies
consisted typically of occasional new dentures and a very quick cleaning of
these dentures by the elderly person, the carer or nursing home staff. Due to
advances in dental care being enjoyed by today’s adults, we are now seeing a
dentate elderly population with restorative and preventive needs and many of
these requiring treatment for an increasingly complex number of dental
problems.[52]
2.41
For the elderly, good dental health, meaning
well-maintained natural teeth or well functioning dentures, is a basic
pre-requisite of good nutrition. Poorly maintained teeth or badly functioning
dentures restrict diet and poor diet is linked to conditions in older people
such as cardio-vascular disease and bone thinning as well as contributing to
memory loss and poor cognitive functioning. Pain and suffering from untreated
dental problems can contribute to depression and other mental health problems
and the long term use of pain killers and antidepressants. COTA argued that poor
dental health can contribute to the deterioration in the overall health of
older people that can lead to premature admission to nursing homes or death.[53]
2.42
Older Australians have a legacy of dental
disease and repair which necessitates continuing dental care, particularly in
light of dental problems incurred as a result of living through the Depression,
world wars and immediate post war years without the benefit of fluoridation.
The ageing process results in the wearing down of the teeth, fillings and gums.
Shrinkage of gums exposes teeth roots which are then susceptible to decay. Dr
Wendell Evans, Senior Lecturer in Preventive and Community Dentistry at the
University of Melbourne, emphasised that:
As one ages, the consequences for dental needs are that they
tend to become more, rather than less, complex UNLESS comprehensive preventive
programs are in place.[54]
2.43
Dr Evans stressed the need for regular check ups
for preventative and maintenance care in the elderly. Without such check ups
previous efforts to maintain functioning teeth could be undermined to the
extent that repair may not be warranted or the costs of repair may be
prohibitive, leading to a situation of worsening oral health or removal of
teeth.[55]
2.44
An important point was also made that while
elderly people in nursing homes have access to qualified medical practitioners,
their carers and health professionals generally have no oral health training.
The Victorian Government submitted that ‘one of the barriers to dependant older
people obtaining oral health is the lack of dental health knowledge and skill
of carers (Berley et al, 1988)’.[56]
2.45
Dr Peter Foltyn, Consultant Dentist at St
Vincent’s Hospital Dental Department submitted that:
Oral health care has not been seen as a priority nor has it been
fully appreciated by the medical profession and government. Many doctors have a
limited working knowledge of oral and dental anatomy and the close relationship
between oral health and general health. As we near the year 2000 many of our
“baby boomers” will be approaching retirement age. Some will be entering
nursing homes or residential care facilities with most teeth intact, or heavily
restored with extensive crowns and bridges, unlike the average 50-60 year old
of a decade or two ago who was edentulous. Oral neglect by a nursing home or
other facility will see teeth deteriorate significantly within twelve months of
entry to that facility... Education and prevention strategies in oral health care
must be put in place now in order to limit a disaster amongst our aged and disabled.[57]
2.46
Functionally dependent older Australians,
including the homebound and institutionalised, are particularly disadvantaged.
They have high requirements for extractions, scaling, oral hygiene instruction
and dentures but most States have extremely limited domiciliary services. For
example, the Tasmanian Dental Service conceded that the current and future
dental needs of the homebound, institutionalised and disabled is a significant
problem that is beyond the scope of the dental workforce in Tasmania’,[58] while in Victoria there are
only two publicly funded domiciliary vans and few private dentists to provide
domiciliary care to this group.[59]
The Victorian Government noted that ‘people in institutions require sound
dental health to ensure that their level of dependency does not increase’.[60]
2.47
Dr Jane Chalmers informed the Committee that the
AIHW Dental Services Unit in conjunction with the ADA (SA Branch) was
conducting an investigation of the oral health of the increasingly dentate
nursing home population. The study was providing many insights into the
problems encountered by nursing home staff and dental staff when organising
dental care for nursing home residents. Dr Chalmers was hopeful ‘that the data
from this and other geriatric dental investigations will be used to assist both
the government and private sector with the development of appropriate and
effective dental services for older Australians’.[61]
2.48
The following needs of the elderly were
identified in evidence before the Committee:
- access to affordable care which includes regular oral health
assessments and the provision and maintenance of dentures;
- services that minimise travel requirements, including visiting
dental services for the institutionalised and homebound;
- specialist services that cater for people with dementia, who are
less able to communicate if they have a dental problem;
- the education of carers in oral health issues; and
- a co-ordinated, interdisciplinary approach between dentists,
other health care providers and dieticians.
Rural and remote Australians
2.49
Evidence before the Committee suggested that
‘there is a marked inequity of dental services depending on where one resides’.[62] There was widespread
acknowledgment among those providing evidence that Australians dwelling in
rural and remote areas were subject to particular disadvantage.
2.50
The Australian Council of Social Service (ACOSS)
drew attention to the spread of dental practitioners. The Australian average is
43 per 100 000 people. Capital cities average 51.2 per 100 000 compared
with 28.7 per 100 000 outside capital cities. In some rural areas the rate
is much lower, for example in some rural areas of Western Australia there are
only 5.9 practitioners per 100 000 people.[63] The Committee also noted
evidence that in some rural areas no dental service is available.[64]
2.51
The National Rural Health Alliance (NRHA) cited
a range of reasons for dentists not taking up rural practice, namely lower
earning capacity, lack of professional support, lack of continuing education,
and lack of employment, health and educational opportunities for their
families.[65]
In Queensland, strategies such as a rural incentive scheme where above award
payments are made to dentists and a Dental Scholarship scheme that commits a
few graduates to rural locations, have been successfully used to attract
dentists to rural practice.[66]
2.52
The Committee received evidence that in some
areas of Australia there was no opportunity for public adult dental care ‘due
to the complete absence of public facilities and the inability of provision of
adequate financing for treatment through private facilities’.[67] The lack of access to dental
services and the costs of transport to services from rural and remote areas
compound the disadvantage of this portion of the population. Mobile dental
services are generally regarded as the most viable way to service remote
communities, although they are costly to establish, operate and maintain. Case
studies were provided to illustrate the disadvantage of people living in remote
areas.[68]
2.53
The NRHA cited longer waiting times for routine
services at both public and private surgeries in rural areas: up to 2.5 years
wait in rural New South Wales as opposed to 7.5 months in Sydney. The Alliance
also made the point that long distances may be travelled to access specialist
services.[69]
This lack of access to care has an impact on the dental health of people in
rural and remote areas, as does the decreased likelihood of them having a
fluoridated water supply and their often more limited range of affordable fresh
produce with its concomitant problems for nutrition.
2.54
An AIHW report in February 1997 identified a
higher proportion of decayed, missing or filled teeth for rural patients
compared to urban patients from all age groups except those aged 55-64 years.
The highest rates of decayed teeth were for rural patients aged 25-34 years.[70] DHSV informed the Committee
that, according to its data, children in rural areas had 60 per cent more
dental decay than children in urban areas.[71]
Reduced access to services has long term effects as children and young people,
in particular, may not receive preventative and early treatment which would
improve their oral health status for the future.
2.55
Mr Gordon Gregory, Executive Director of the
NRHA, expressed the view that:
Overall, the status of rural health is worse than in the major
cities. In general, the more remote the individual, the worse his or her health
is likely to be. This situation is exacerbated by relatively poor access to
health services, few options, higher costs and an adverse cultural approach to
health matters in country areas.[72]
Indigenous Australians
2.56
The Fifth Biennial Health Report of the AIHW in
1996 noted that:
As early as 1925 Aboriginal groups were reported as having a
substantial advantage over other Australians with regard to dental health
(Campbell & Moore 1930). Although there is little published information
specifically comparing the dental caries experience of contemporary Australian
Aboriginal people with that of other Australians, the existing literature
indicates a loss of this historical advantage. For instance, while there has
been a major decrease in caries experience in other Australian children since
the 1970s ... there has been an increase in caries experience in Aboriginal
children (Schamschula et al. 1980).[73]
2.57
The National Aboriginal Community Controlled
Health Organisation (NACCHO) submitted that indigenous Australians now suffer
greater levels of dental disease than non-indigenous Australians generally.
NACCHO drew attention to the high level of diabetes in the Aboriginal population,
which may lead to the development of severe periodontal disease and to the
greater number of Aboriginal people who are ill and have a greater risk of
severe dental infection. NACCHO cited the National Aboriginal Health Strategy
(1989) as identifying dental health as a major problem in Aboriginal
communities due to factors such as limited access to services, high costs, lack
of awareness and fear.[74]
Other relevant factors include poverty, diet and lack of fluoridated water.[75]
2.58
The Northern Territory Government indicated that
in the Territory the impact of poor dental health is particularly evident among
Aboriginal people, who comprise about 27 percent of the population, the
majority of whom are resident in remote locations. The Territory Government also
noted that dental health is one among a complex of problems related to diet and
other living situation factors. These include chronic diseases such as
diabetes, heart and renal disease, which are more prevalent among Aboriginal
people as a group, and which have compounding adverse effects on health
outcomes.[76]
2.59
Most indigenous people cannot afford private
dental care and are dependent on public services. For Aboriginal people
resident in remote communities, private treatment is simply not an option
because these communities do not have resident private sector dentists.[77] The size of waiting lists for
public dental treatment at the present time precludes optimal dental care for
those reliant on the public system. This is addressed in detail in Chapter 3.
NACCHO submitted that:
The result is that in many regions any dental care comes down to
a “relief of pain” basis, usually an extraction, with no coordinated care or
education being provided. It also means that the dental services that do exist
in ACCHSs [Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services] are providing
dental care for people outside of their communities. Many urban services are
seeing people who have travelled long distances from rural and remote areas,
because they cannot access appropriate dental care locally or regionally.[78]
2.60
NACCHO also stated that in remote and rural
communities ‘we are approaching the situation where they will have no services
at all’ and that ‘in many areas Aboriginal children do not receive
dental care at school’.[79]
The Territory Government commented that the extended nature of Aboriginal
families, and cultural obligations, mean that Aboriginal people may move
between a number of different locations during the year. This contributes to
difficulties with service delivery and the completion of treatment programs.[80]
2.61
The AIHW provided evidence that indigenous
Australians had a higher rate of edentulism than non-indigenous Australians
(16.3 per cent versus 10.9 per cent). They also have a higher
percentage of patients who usually visit dentists for a problem than
non-indigenous Australians (63.7 per cent versus 49.7 per cent).[81]
2.62
The AIHW’s Fifth Biennial Health Report in 1996
referred to data from the Children’s Dental Service in the Northern Territory
that provides a program for school age children. This data indicated that
Aboriginal children had a greater number of infant teeth affected by dental
caries than other Australian children and that there was nearly a threefold
variation in the mean number of decayed teeth between other Australian born
children and Aboriginal children. It concluded that ‘Aboriginal children thus
have a double disadvantage: more disease experience and a higher ratio of
disease experience being untreated’.[82]
2.63
The AIHW’s Report noted that tooth extraction is
counter to the desired goal of maintaining functional natural dentition for
life and to the advocated treatment which emphasises monitoring and prevention.
Figures indicated that a higher percentage of Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander (ATSI) patients received extractions than other patients. In some age
groups the difference was significant. For example, in the 25-44 year age group
at non-emergency visits, 25.7 per cent of ATSI people received
extractions, compared with 6.4 per cent of other patients.
2.64
The report also noted that in some instances
ATSI people had a lower rate for fillings. Fillings are viewed as attempts to
restore damaged teeth and prevent further deterioration which may lead to the
need for extraction. At emergency visits 23.4 per cent of ATSI patients
received fillings, compared with 40.5 per cent of other patients. For both
emergency and non-emergency visits, the trend across age groups was for the
percentage of people receiving fillings to decrease for ATSI patients, whereas
for other patients the percentage receiving fillings remained high. The report
found that:
Older Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander patients... receive a
pattern of dental care which involves more extractions and fewer fillings. This
pattern indicates less favourable treatment processes.[83]
2.65
Indigenous Australians, whether or not they live
in rural and remote areas, are recognised as being a significantly
disadvantaged group. Their needs include access to affordable services, oral
health education and prevention programs and services which are delivered in a
way which ATSI people can feel confident in accessing.
Medically compromised patients
2.66
Evidence was received by the Committee that
there was a small yet significant group of Australians whose illnesses put them
in greater need of dental care than the general population and who, often, were
disadvantaged in respect of that need.
2.67
Many medically compromised patients are affected
by their illness to such an extent that they cannot continue working and, due
to financial pressures, must rely on public dental services. In rural and
remote areas there are often inadequate accessible public dental facilities and
in cities the public facilities are over-burdened. The Committee was informed
that:
Some facilities have 2-3 years waiting lists whilst others have
closed their waiting lists altogether citing inadequate resources and only
providing relief from pain and are certainly unable to provide preventative
dental care or a meaningful treatment plan for patients requiring more extensive
treatment.[84]
2.68
A range of illnesses and treatments have
implications for the oral health of the patient. These include heart disease,
oral cancers, immunological conditions and organ transplants.[85] In such cases routine oral
examinations are necessary. Often dental treatment is required before a patient
can proceed with surgery, including heart valve replacement, organ transplant
surgery, or radiotherapy to the head and neck. Patients with immune
deficiencies such as AIDS often require biopsies of oral lesions and management
of xerostomia (dry mouth). It is also noteworthy that the symptoms of a wide
range of illnesses, including HIV, are often evidenced in the mouth.
2.69
Dr Foltyn gave evidence regarding the case of:
People with specific medical problems that impact on oral
health; or the reverse – the oral health complicates their medical management.
For patients with head and neck cancer, very often the oral health is an
integral part of their medical management; and unless you get it right with
removal of teeth or cleaning the mouth up in patients who are having specific
heart surgery, patients die. The mouth has to be clean.[86]
2.70
People with HIV/AIDS have a higher incidence of
gingivitis, cavities, and dental disease than normal. Advances in HIV drug
treatment have also been linked to more rapid deterioration in dental health by
increasing the prevalence of xerostomia.[87]
The early detection of oral symptoms of HIV by dentists can help save lives as
preventative treatments may be possible.
2.71
The Australian Federation of AIDS Organisations
(AFAO) reported difficulties in finding dentists with experience of dealing
with HIV as well as extended waiting times at some HIV clinics. AFAO stated
that people with HIV in rural areas were ‘among the most marginalised groups in
the country’. AFAO referred to breaches of confidentiality regarding the HIV
status of people in rural areas and the preference by many for the anonymity of
the city, despite the transport costs involved. AFAO also noted that, as people
with HIV/AIDS are living longer and many have allowed dental problems to worsen
as they thought they would not live long, there is a need to extend the level
of dental work undertaken at clinics (for example, to include crowns) in order
to restore their appearance and possibly assist them to re-enter the workforce.[88]
2.72
For many medically compromised patients,
treatment or routine dental assessments are required on medical grounds and
failure to provide treatment may further compromise their general health. Dr
Foltyn gave the example of an elderly pensioner with a cancer in the mouth who
required modification to her dentures and must pay for the service even though
it is needed in order to assist her medical treatment.[89]
2.73
Dr Mark Schifter, of the Westmead Hospital
Dental Clinical School, submitted to the Committee that the number of people
who are economically disadvantaged due to significant ill-health, whether
chronic debilitating medical problems or acute, major and devastating
illnesses, is an ever increasing proportion of the population as a result of
our ageing community and progress in interventional medicine. In his opinion:
This group is badly disadvantaged for several reasons: this
issue remains under-recognised; secondly, largely because of historical
necessity, the main focus of public dental services, and its present workforce
is to treat dental caries and its effects, for the relatively healthy,
ambulatory, but economically deprived segment of the population.[90]
The homeless
2.74
The Committee received evidence that people who are
homeless find it very difficult to access mainstream services and that
homeless-specific services were vital to ensure fair access for this
disadvantaged group.
2.75
The Council for Homeless Persons Australia cited
a report it had produced which documented a ‘deplorable’ and ‘appalling
standard of oral hygiene’ among the homeless and largely untreated dental decay
and disease.[91]
Statistics provided to the Committee by the Council included:
- of homeless people surveyed, more than half had tooth decay,
80 per cent had some form of disease and of those, 62 per cent had
severe periodontal disease with advanced, irreversible damage;
- 37 per cent of the sample group had no teeth and of these,
30.6 per cent had no dentures. Of those with dentures, nearly half had
been wearing them for more than 30 years, compared with an accepted norm of
five years; and
- in the 12 months to June 1997, an estimated 147 000 people
(of whom 31 per cent were children) used homeless services and a further
estimated 304 000 requests for support or accommodation could not be met.[92]
2.76
The Committee noted with concern the evidence of
Dr John Wilkinson of the Sydney United Dental Hospital (UDH), regarding the
fact that many young homeless people have open wounds in the mouth which leave
them open to contracting a range of diseases including Hepatitis A, B and C and
HIV.[93]
2.77
The homeless face barriers to access in the form
of costs both of treatment and transport, waiting periods, substance
dependencies and mental illness. Their transient lifestyle makes continuity of
care difficult. Nevertheless, the Committee also received evidence that,
despite the difficulties in meeting the needs of the homeless, there had been
some success in using specially targeted programs.[94]
The mentally ill
2.78
Another disadvantaged group identified in
evidence was the mentally ill. The Canberra Schizophrenic Fellowship informed
the Committee that many of the people who develop mental conditions, such as
schizophrenia or bi-polar disorder are too ill to work and are dependent on
public dental care. The Fellowship advised that the onset of major mental
illness often occurs in the late teens or early twenties and dental problems
dealt with inappropriately in young people may subsequently become a source of
major difficulties.[95]
2.79
The Fellowship noted that though there is access
to public emergency dental care:
it is almost impossible for most people with a mental illness to
negotiate the methods for accessing emergency treatment... The effects of
medication and of illness often make it difficult for people with a mental
illness to make a phone call early in the morning. If they do manage to reach a
phone, the lines are often engaged and the whole business becomes so
frustrating that it is just too much for people who are already ill... It is not
easy for many people who have a mental illness to wait for long periods of
time. They may not always understand the consequences of leaving when they
cannot stand any longer to be in a confined space.[96]
2.80
The UDH in Sydney referred to the mentally ill
as one of the groups which had specific difficulties in accessing mainstream
dental services. It submitted that this group needs transport, accompanying
health workers and resource intensive preventative interventions in order to
ensure appropriate and timely dental care.[97]
Overseas-born, Language Other Than
English (LOTE) speakers, including refugees
2.81
Members of this group suffer the obvious
difficulties associated with language barriers to accessing services. Often
they lack information on what services are available to them. There were almost
100 000 settler arrivals in Australia in 1995-96 and many settlers would
find cost a barrier to good dental care.
2.82
The Committee received evidence that the dental
needs of people from many immigrant communities have been found to be greater
than those of locally born residents.[98]
Information provided to the inquiry by the AIHW indicated that:
- Overseas-born, LOTE speakers had a higher percentage for whom
dental visits were a large financial burden (15.8 versus 9.8 per cent) and
who would have a lot of difficulty in paying a $100 dental bill (20.3 versus
13.5 per cent) than Australian-born, English speakers.
- Among those receiving publicly funded dental care, overseas-born,
LOTE speakers had a higher percentage reporting emergency dental care than
Australian-born, English speakers (67.9 versus 49.2 per cent).
- Among those receiving publicly funded dental care, overseas-born,
LOTE speakers had a higher percentage with advanced periodontal attachment
destruction (15.6 versus 6.1 per cent), yet they received a lower rate of
preventative services (0.13 versus 0.23 services) and a lower rate of
periodontal services (0.13 versus 0.24 services/courses of care) than
Australian-born, English speakers.[99]
2.83
The Refugee Resettlement Committee in the ACT,
informed the Committee that newly arrived refugees have, prior to arriving in
this country, been in stressful situations where there were nutrition and
hygiene problems and an almost total lack of dental health services. On arrival
they usually have a great need for urgent and extensive dental treatment. The
Resettlement Committee also submitted that, though provisions were made to
assist refugees in accessing services, financial and staffing pressures often
result in less than adequate treatment. Many migrants exist on low incomes,
particularly if they must wait two years before being eligible for social
security benefits.[100]
Forms of disadvantage
2.84
Just as a range of groups suffering disadvantage
in dental care has been identified, so there are a number of forms of
disadvantage that must be addressed if the inequalities in oral health are to
be rectified. These are inter-related and it is common for more than one of
them to affect those who are disadvantaged.
2.85
As has been noted earlier, the cost of private
dental care inhibits many Australians from seeking or maintaining a good
standard of oral health. This fact was reinforced by the numerous submissions
from members of the public as well as from comments in submissions by community
organisations. The significant barrier which cost represents to many consumers
was highlighted by the call made by COTA for an inquiry into the costs of
dental care to create greater transparency regarding the costs of dentists’
services,[101]
as well as by the Health Issues Centre in Melbourne which sought a referral of
the cost and pricing structures of dental services to the Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission.[102]
A significant number of submissions also called for some form of improved,
subsidised dental system for the disadvantaged.
2.86
The relationship between dental treatment and
income level indicates that those without the funds for private dental care
have generally received treatment that has focused on emergency procedures
rather than preventative and restorative care. Evidence referred to earlier in
this chapter indicates that many disadvantaged Australians are caught in a
cycle of emergency care, receiving dental treatment that eases the immediate
burden of pain, but which is clearly second best in terms of their long term
oral health.
2.87
Waiting lists in the public dental system are a
factor directly affecting the type of care received. Evidence presented to the
Committee painted a disturbing picture of waiting lists for public dental care
ranging from months to years and, in some cases, closed lists. The dental
problems of those waiting for treatment would usually have worsened by the time
they receive treatment and several service providers indicated that,
increasingly, they were forced to bring forward for treatment those patients
whose oral health had reached emergency status. Such waiting times, which are
far beyond that normally experienced by patients in the private system, clearly
mitigate against a continuing program of care which focuses on prevention and
longer term oral health.
2.88
Physical access to services is, without doubt, a
significant issue for many Australians, particularly those living in rural and
remote areas. Evidence already cited indicates that, in certain areas of this
country, dental services are difficult to access and patients must travel
considerable distances to receive care. Less obvious, though no less important,
is the need to ensure that suitable services are accessible to other groups
including the home bound and the institutionalised members of the community.
The use of private and public services in addressing disadvantage
2.89
It is clear to the Committee that in their
current state, neither the public nor private dental systems are effectively
meeting the needs of all Australians.
2.90
A large number of Australians are unable to
access private dental care and the experience of those reliant on the public
system is that it cannot currently deliver services to meet the needs of all
its clients. Burgeoning waiting lists, the increasing focus on emergency rather
than maintenance or preventative work and cuts to services mean that, for many,
the likelihood of accessing appropriate care is diminishing. Yet the need for
public dental care is growing. The Committee also notes that, the longer
members of the community have inadequate dental care, the more their problems
will compound and the more difficult and expensive it will be to rectify those
problems.
2.91
As previously noted, annual expenditure in
Australia on dental services is nearly $2 billion. In 1994-95 the Commonwealth
Government spent $105 million and State Government expenditure was
approximately $141 million in this field.[103]
Over the five financial years 1990-91 to 1994-95 Commonwealth Government
expenditure grew from $33 million to $105 million. Its expenditure has since
dropped as a result of the CDHP’s cessation. State Government expenditure over
the same period increased from $117 to $141 million and, according to Professor
Spencer of the AIHW, there is little evidence of a withdrawal of funding by
State Governments with the implementation of the CDHP.[104]
2.92
The Committee received evidence regarding the
fact that dental services are the least subsidised area of health services and
that its situation is atypical when compared with other areas of health service
which the Commonwealth is enabled by the Constitution to fund. In 1994-95 two
thirds of the total expenditure on health services was subsidised by
government. Government subsidises 74 per cent of expenditure on
institutional services, 83 per cent of expenditure on medical services and
just under half of expenditure on pharmaceuticals. By comparison, dental
services received only a 13 per cent government subsidy and that was in
the year the Commonwealth made a substantial contribution through the CDHP.[105] This differentiation between
dental and general health was an issue which received widespread unfavourable
comment in evidence to the Committee.
2.93
Although there is an undersupply of dental
professionals in certain rural and remote areas, there was no evidence put to
the Committee that as a nation, we are undersupplied with professionals to
service Australia’s population or that Australia lacks the capacity to meet the
needs of those who are disadvantaged under the current arrangements.
2.94
While there is no single solution to the
problems described above, the Committee is of the view that vast improvements
can be made to meet the needs of the disadvantaged by better utilising the
capacities of both the private and public sectors. As the South Australian Dental
Service stated:
The capacity of the private and public dental services to meet
the current and future needs of low income and other disadvantaged groups was
well demonstrated during the life of the Commonwealth Dental Health Program.
That willingness and capacity continues to exist.[106]
Navigation: Previous Page | Contents | Next Page