Prevention in practice

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articleResearch

Standard

Prevention in practice. / Birch, Stephen; Bridgman, Colette; Brocklehurst, Paul; Ellwood, Roger; Gomez, Juliana; Helgeson, Michael; Ismail, Amid; Macey, Richard; Mariotti, Angelo; Twetman, Svante; Preshaw, Philip M; Pretty, Iain A; Whelton, Helen.

In: B M C Oral Health, Vol. 15 , No. Suppl 1, S12, 2015, p. 1-9.

Research output: Contribution to journalConference articleResearch

Harvard

Birch, S, Bridgman, C, Brocklehurst, P, Ellwood, R, Gomez, J, Helgeson, M, Ismail, A, Macey, R, Mariotti, A, Twetman, S, Preshaw, PM, Pretty, IA & Whelton, H 2015, 'Prevention in practice', B M C Oral Health, vol. 15 , no. Suppl 1, S12, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6831-15-S1-S12

APA

Birch, S., Bridgman, C., Brocklehurst, P., Ellwood, R., Gomez, J., Helgeson, M., Ismail, A., Macey, R., Mariotti, A., Twetman, S., Preshaw, P. M., Pretty, I. A., & Whelton, H. (2015). Prevention in practice. B M C Oral Health, 15 (Suppl 1), 1-9. [S12]. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6831-15-S1-S12

Vancouver

Birch S, Bridgman C, Brocklehurst P, Ellwood R, Gomez J, Helgeson M et al. Prevention in practice. B M C Oral Health. 2015;15 (Suppl 1):1-9. S12. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6831-15-S1-S12

Author

Birch, Stephen ; Bridgman, Colette ; Brocklehurst, Paul ; Ellwood, Roger ; Gomez, Juliana ; Helgeson, Michael ; Ismail, Amid ; Macey, Richard ; Mariotti, Angelo ; Twetman, Svante ; Preshaw, Philip M ; Pretty, Iain A ; Whelton, Helen. / Prevention in practice. In: B M C Oral Health. 2015 ; Vol. 15 , No. Suppl 1. pp. 1-9.

Bibtex

@inproceedings{b7203b981cfe4cfc9c120e7c9a3b31bf,
title = "Prevention in practice",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: This paper is a summary document of the Prevention in Practice Conference and Special Supplement of BMC Oral Health. It represents the consensus view of the presenters and captures the questions, comments and suggestions of the assembled audience.METHODS: Using the prepared manuscripts for the conference, collected materials from scribes during the conference and additional resources collated in advance of the meeting, authors agreed on the summary document.RESULTS: The Prevention in Practice conference aimed to collate information about which diseases could be prevented in practice, how diseases could be identified early enough to facilitate prevention, what evidence based therapies and treatments were available and how, given the collective evidence, could these be introduced in general dental practice within different reimbursement models.CONCLUSIONS: While examples of best practice were provided from both social care and insurance models it was clear that further work was required on both provider and payer side to ensure that evidence based prevention was both implemented properly but also reimbursed sufficiently. It is clear that savings can be made but these must not be overstated and that the use of effective skill mix would be key to realizing efficiencies. The evidence base for prevention of caries and periodontal disease has been available for many years, as have the tools and techniques to detect, diagnose and stage the diseases appropriately. Dentistry finds itself in a enviable position with respect to its ability to prevent, arrest and reverse much of the burden of disease, however, it is clear that the infrastructure within primary care must be changed, and practitioners and their teams appropriately supported to deliver this paradigm shift from a surgical to a medical model.",
author = "Stephen Birch and Colette Bridgman and Paul Brocklehurst and Roger Ellwood and Juliana Gomez and Michael Helgeson and Amid Ismail and Richard Macey and Angelo Mariotti and Svante Twetman and Preshaw, {Philip M} and Pretty, {Iain A} and Helen Whelton",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1186/1472-6831-15-S1-S12",
language = "English",
volume = "15 ",
pages = "1--9",
journal = "BMC Oral Health",
issn = "1472-6831",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "Suppl 1",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Prevention in practice

AU - Birch, Stephen

AU - Bridgman, Colette

AU - Brocklehurst, Paul

AU - Ellwood, Roger

AU - Gomez, Juliana

AU - Helgeson, Michael

AU - Ismail, Amid

AU - Macey, Richard

AU - Mariotti, Angelo

AU - Twetman, Svante

AU - Preshaw, Philip M

AU - Pretty, Iain A

AU - Whelton, Helen

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - BACKGROUND: This paper is a summary document of the Prevention in Practice Conference and Special Supplement of BMC Oral Health. It represents the consensus view of the presenters and captures the questions, comments and suggestions of the assembled audience.METHODS: Using the prepared manuscripts for the conference, collected materials from scribes during the conference and additional resources collated in advance of the meeting, authors agreed on the summary document.RESULTS: The Prevention in Practice conference aimed to collate information about which diseases could be prevented in practice, how diseases could be identified early enough to facilitate prevention, what evidence based therapies and treatments were available and how, given the collective evidence, could these be introduced in general dental practice within different reimbursement models.CONCLUSIONS: While examples of best practice were provided from both social care and insurance models it was clear that further work was required on both provider and payer side to ensure that evidence based prevention was both implemented properly but also reimbursed sufficiently. It is clear that savings can be made but these must not be overstated and that the use of effective skill mix would be key to realizing efficiencies. The evidence base for prevention of caries and periodontal disease has been available for many years, as have the tools and techniques to detect, diagnose and stage the diseases appropriately. Dentistry finds itself in a enviable position with respect to its ability to prevent, arrest and reverse much of the burden of disease, however, it is clear that the infrastructure within primary care must be changed, and practitioners and their teams appropriately supported to deliver this paradigm shift from a surgical to a medical model.

AB - BACKGROUND: This paper is a summary document of the Prevention in Practice Conference and Special Supplement of BMC Oral Health. It represents the consensus view of the presenters and captures the questions, comments and suggestions of the assembled audience.METHODS: Using the prepared manuscripts for the conference, collected materials from scribes during the conference and additional resources collated in advance of the meeting, authors agreed on the summary document.RESULTS: The Prevention in Practice conference aimed to collate information about which diseases could be prevented in practice, how diseases could be identified early enough to facilitate prevention, what evidence based therapies and treatments were available and how, given the collective evidence, could these be introduced in general dental practice within different reimbursement models.CONCLUSIONS: While examples of best practice were provided from both social care and insurance models it was clear that further work was required on both provider and payer side to ensure that evidence based prevention was both implemented properly but also reimbursed sufficiently. It is clear that savings can be made but these must not be overstated and that the use of effective skill mix would be key to realizing efficiencies. The evidence base for prevention of caries and periodontal disease has been available for many years, as have the tools and techniques to detect, diagnose and stage the diseases appropriately. Dentistry finds itself in a enviable position with respect to its ability to prevent, arrest and reverse much of the burden of disease, however, it is clear that the infrastructure within primary care must be changed, and practitioners and their teams appropriately supported to deliver this paradigm shift from a surgical to a medical model.

U2 - 10.1186/1472-6831-15-S1-S12

DO - 10.1186/1472-6831-15-S1-S12

M3 - Conference article

C2 - 26391906

VL - 15

SP - 1

EP - 9

JO - BMC Oral Health

JF - BMC Oral Health

SN - 1472-6831

IS - Suppl 1

M1 - S12

ER -

ID: 162444074