Practice

Practice

Practice

ORAL HEALTH TOOL KIT FOR PRIMARY CARE PRACTICE

The integration of oral health into primary care practice is essential to improving oral health and overall health outcomes across the lifespan. For too long, oral health has been separated from the rest of the body, making it difficult for many populations and communities to access necessary preventive and emergent oral care. Developed through a collaboration between the Hawai'i State Department of Health, Family Health Services Division, and the UH Mānoa Nancy Atmosphera-Walch School of Nursing, this toolkit contains valuable resources for integrating oral health into your primary care practice.

Check out the cover letter to read more about this innovative tool kit.

Download the Fluoride Varnish Factsheet for Parents.

Download the Steps to Applying Fluoride Varnish handout and video.

Over Age 65? Oral Health Care Falls Off the Map

Learn how the residents of the Fair Haven Retirement Community in Birmingham receive oral health care from an interprofessional team of dentists, physicians, and other health professionals through a program created by Dr. Lillian M. Mitchell, Director of Geriatric Dentistry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry.

THE NEED

After age 65, millions of Americans go without regular oral health checkups and treatment — even though research has found that oral health problems like periodontal disease are associated with diabetes, cancer, heart and lung diseases, progression of dementia and Alzheimer’s, and other serious illnesses.

The problem is growing as Americans age. An estimated 10,000 baby boomers are turning 65 and retiring each day. By 2030, more than 70 million people are expected to be 65 or older. Of this “silver tsunami,” only an estimated 2% will have access to dental insurance benefits, according to State of Decay: Are Older Americans Coming of Age Without Oral Healthcare, a report by Oral Health America’s Wisdom Tooth Project. Factors such as limited income after retirement, the high cost of private dental insurance for older Americans, and the exclusion of dental care from Medicare benefits, all contribute to this neglect.

“A mouth infection is a very dangerous situation because older people are often more at risk for a cascade of infections,” says Dr. Tara Cortes, Executive Director of the Hartford Institute for Geriatric Nursing at NYU College of Nursing. “Nurses play a crucial role in educating the patient and other health care professionals about the need for regular health care,” she says. The Institute works closely with OHNEP to include oral health care in its outreach.

You can change this in your community. Here’s how.

A HOMEGROWN SOLUTION 

Thanks to a “light bulb moment” by Dr. Lillian M. Mitchell, more than 1,100 residents of the Fair Haven Retirement Community have received oral health care since 2010 from an interprofessional team of dentists, physicians, and other health professionals.  Dr. Mitchell is Director of Geriatric Dentistry at the University of Alabama at Birmingham(UAB) School of Dentistry.  Fair Haven, in Birmingham, is the state’s largest retirement community, with six levels of care from independent living to long-term nursing.

The idea was sparked in 2009. Dr. Mitchell had just completed interprofessional training through the university’s Geriatric Education Center’s (GEC) Faculty Scholar’s Program when she received word that eight sophomore UAB dental students who were trained to clean teeth were available for a clinical rotation. She knew that Fair Haven’s medical director wanted to find a way to improve oral hygiene for the residents. Dr. Mitchell coordinated the program with administrators of the UAB dental and medical schools. A community foundation provided seed money, and with support from the dental school Fair Haven, and industry, the program was born.

Dr. Mitchell and her interprofessional team train the Fair Haven nursing staff and certified nursing assistants in oral health and best practices for oral care of the long-term patient.

The clinic now has three modern dental treatment areas in Fair Haven, and will soon expand treatment to residents of other retirement homes in the community.  All participants receive interprofessional training. “The biggest outcome is that the nursing community on the Fair Haven units are proactive every day in identifying oral problemsand making sure their patients get treated,” says Dr. Mitchell. There has been a decline in aspiration pneumonia, and swifter identification and treatment of oral problems before they lead to larger health issues.

Dentists working on a patientResidents of the Fair Haven Retirement Community in Birmingham, Alabama, benefit from an interprofessional approach to prevent and treat oral health problems. The program is a community-based partnership between the University of Alabama-Birmingham (UAB) School of Dentistry and Fair Haven. It was funded by a Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham grant, gifts in kind from Henry Schein Dental, and private donations of equipment, materials and furnishings.

THE STEPS

Dr. Mitchell followed a multi-step approach, which OHNEP recommends, when developing a facility-based interprofessional oral health program in your community.

  1. Reach Out To People You Know. If you are affiliated with a university or with a retirement or nursing home facility, talk to the appropriate program director. If you are an interested member of the community, talk with your local senior citizen organizations, or other community or business groups that can help you build support.
  2. Identify A Clinic Or Dental Office That Will Dedicate Space. Partner with local business groups or nonprofit organizations to help you build support and find resources.
  3. Find Out Where Local Health Professionals Can Get Interprofessional Training In Oral Health Care.  
    1. Smiles for Life, the nation's only comprehensive oral health course, developed by the Society of Teachers Family Medicine Group on Oral Health.  It can be taken online. Identify in your community a health care provider who can provide hands-on clinical training in coordination with the online courses.
    2. Geriatric Education Centers at universities around the country, funded by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA).
  4. Get Community Support. Spread the word locally about the oral health for older adult initiative: through local newspapers (hard copy and online), radio, professional and community groups, events, and posts on social media.

Teeth for Two: A Model Midwifery and Nursing Curriculum

Education and training are the first step for adding oral health care to your interprofessional practice. Learn how NYU’s College of Nursing infused the missing oral health piece into every aspect of its Nurse-Midwifery Master’s Program and Family Nurse Practitioner Program. See the curriculum content and adapt it for your own institution or practice.

THE NEED

Diligent oral health care is especially important during pregnancy, both for mother and child.

Yet health professionals seldom learn as part of their health education how to conduct a prenatal oral assessment, or have the facts about why it is important.  

  • Pregnancy gingivitis— bacterial infection caused by physiological changes that can lead to inflammation of the gum tissue— affects 60-75% of pregnant women.

  • Cavities are experienced by 41% of pregnant persons

  • Even when an oral problem occurs during pregnancy, only 50% seek dental treatment

  • A serious tooth infection can spread throughout the body, affecting both mother and fetus.

These prenatal oral health problems can also affect the newborn child if left untreated. Dental caries (the infectious process that leads to cavities) is the most common chronic disease of children under 72 months of age. Research suggests that most infants are exposed to these caries-causing bacteria from the person with whom they have the most physical contact—usually their mothers.

MIDWIVES IN THE VANGUARD

Midwives are positioned to be frontline educators for pregnant women about the importance of oral health Midwife with pregnant womancare during pregnancy and for their newborns.

Yet, as a result of its traditional absence from most health care education, attention to oral health during pregnancy is often not a routine part of prenatal care for many midwives as well as for ob-gyns, other physicians, physician assistants, and nurses.

Now, as recent midwifery and nursing graduates are being educated on oral health care and entering the field, this is beginning to change.

NYU graduate student midwife Kristen Gomes, who is doing her midwifery clinical experience in a private practice at Women and Infant’s Hospital of Rhode Island, says that the health care providers she works with “are grateful for the new evidence that I bring to them—making them aware of the importance of treating simple caries and any oral health discrepancies during pregnancy, since it can have potentially detrimental effects on the fetus.”

You can lead this change in your institution. Here’s how.

THE SOLUTION: NYU’S MODEL NURSE-MIDWIFERY CURRICULUM

When the NYU College of Nursing decided to add the missing oral health piece to its Nurse-Midwifery Master’s Program, it decided to infuse it into every aspect of the curriculum.

The college even renamed the basic head exam familiar to every doctor, midwife and nurse practitioner—called HEENT (head, eyes, ears, nose, throat) to HEENOT (pronounced he-not)—to include the oral cavity.

Teaching Oral Health Literacy

All courses in primary and gynecologic health, antepartum, and postpartum care now include oral health, and students learn how to practice oral health care and teach oral health literacy as part of a mother and child’s health care. Each year student midwives provide more than 1,080 clinical hours to patients in birth centers, community hospitals, home settings, and medical centers.During those hours, midwifery students get approximately 150 opportunities to perform an oral assessment as part of annual exams, new ob-gyn exams, and postpartum exams.

Midwife examining woman's faceMidwives learn how to conduct an oral exam as part of their midwifery education at NYU College of Nursing. The program is part of two national oral health initiatives directed by the college: OHNEP, (Oral Health Nursing Education and Practice), and TOSH program (Teaching Oral Systemic Health) program.

Oral health is now embedded as well into the Family Nurse Practitioner program—giving the nursing college end-to-end integration of oral health education for its graduate students.

August 30, 2022

 

The Honorable Chiquita Brooks-LaSure

Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services

Department of Health and Human Services

Attention CMS-1779-P

P.O. Box 8016

Baltimore, MD 21244-8016

Submitted electronically to: http://www.regulations.gov

Re: CMS-1770-P (Section II.L.)

 

To Administrator Brooks-LaSure:

 

The Oral Health Nursing Education and Practice Program (OHNEP) is pleased to provide the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) comments on the proposals and request for information on Medicare Parts A and B Payment for Dental (Section II.L.) in the proposed rule on Medicare and Medicaid Programs: CY2023 Payment Policies under the Physician Fee Schedule and Other Changes to Part B Payment Policies, Medicare Shared Savings Program Requirements, etc. (CMS-1770-P).

 

The Oral Health Nursing Education and Practice (OHNEP) Program is a unique national initiative that aims to enhance the nursing profession’s interprofessional role in oral health and its links to overall health in both academic and clinical settings. Funded by the CareQuest Institute for Oral Health, the OHNEP program aims to integrate interprofessional oral health content and competencies for the nation’s 4.2 million nurses in undergraduate and graduate nursing programs through faculty and preceptor development, curriculum integration, and establishment of “best practices” in clinical settings.

 

The OHNEP Program recognizes that oral health has a significant impact on the overall health and well-being of individuals across their lifespan yet, all too often, forgotten as an essential part of overall health. Among older adults, 47% of whom have no dental insurance, the burden of oral disease is most significantly borne by those who are members of racially and ethnically diverse, poor, and under resourced communities (Freed et al., 2021). Poor oral health for older adults is associated with pain, loss of teeth, poor nutrition, infection, increased risk for systemic conditions and related complications associated with serious morbidity and mortality. The aging of the US population, coupled with the increasing number of adults retaining their teeth and who have one or more chronic conditions with an oral-systemic connection, creates an unprecedented need for oral health care among older adults, highlighting the need for improving the population health of older adults by authorizing a Medically Necessary Medicare Dental Benefit.

 

We thank CMS for its willingness to consider revision of the now restrictive definition of medically necessary dental coverage to support a dental benefit for those conditions where the provision of dental services is “inextricably linked to the clinical success of an otherwise covered medical service” and, as such, significantly and integrally related to that primary medical service and delivered in both inpatient and community settings. 

 

As a nurse-led national initiative that has engaged nursing students, faculty, administrators, and practicing clinicians, the OHNEP program is in a unique position to respond to the considered revision for a medically necessary dental benefit for older adults. Registered Nurses (RN), Nurse Practitioners (NP), and Midwives (CNM) are on the frontlines 24/7 of settings where older adults access healthcare in primary and specialty care, hospitals, long term care, as well as home settings. Across these clinical settings, nurses are witness to the impact of poor oral health and lack of a Medicare dental benefit on the health care outcomes and quality of life for older adults with chronic conditions including, but not limited to diabetes, cardiovascular, and respiratory conditions. Of particular note is the relationship of poor oral health and increased risk for serious co-morbidities and complications for conditions like, cancer, solid organ transplants, and autoimmune diseases, which may prevent, delay, as well as interrupt treatment and/or reduce likelihood of optimal clinical outcomes. The related increased costs are a burden to Medicare that could be reduced with preventive dental care before, during, and following treatment as appropriate.

 

Non-Communicable Chronic Conditions

Diabetes. The CDC reports that people with specific non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are more likely to have clinical outcomes that are impacted by severe oral disease, especially periodontal disease (Parker et al., 2020). Diabetes (DM), a metabolic disorder characterized by abnormal glucose metabolism, affects >11% of the population with a marked increase in prevalence (~27%) in persons 65 and older. Physicians, Nurse Practitioners, Registered Nurses, and Physician Assistants provide medical management of DM in primary, specialty, acute, and other clinical settings and understand the bi-directional relationship between effective glycemic control and prophylactic oral health care that contribute to preventing the complications of diabetes and poor glycemic control including nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, and amputation (Lamster, 2014). The total cost of diabetes-related care in the United States has been estimated at $327 billion (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2022). There is a close association of DM and oral diseases. Manifestations in the oral cavity include periodontitis (gum disease), Candida infections, xerostomia (dry mouth), and decay affecting the roots of the teeth and increased potential for tooth loss. DM is the only recognized chronic disorder that is a risk factor for periodontitis. It is important to note that the relationship between DM and periodontitis is bi-directional, as periodontitis has been shown to be a risk factor for poor metabolic control in persons with DM (Lamster, 2014).  

 

Findings from clinical studies reveal that treatment of periodontitis is associated with improvement in glycemic control. Specifically, conservative periodontal treatment is associated with a reduction in HgA1c of 0.4-0.5%. This is due to the removal of periodontal biofilm which reduces the bacterial burden and the resulting reduction in periodontal inflammation (Simpson et al., 2022). Additional analyses of large data bases show that access to conservative periodontal treatment/preventive dental care is associated with improved health outcomes and reduced healthcare costs (Jeffcoat et al., 2014; Nasseh et al., 2016; Lamster et al., 2021). The most recent study by Borah and colleagues (2022), investigating the association of preventive dental care and health outcomes for persons with DM and cardiovascular disease, used the Arkansas BlueCross and BlueShield database from 2014-2018. Accessing preventive dental care resulted in an annual savings of between $515 and $574 for enrollees with diabetes, and between $866 and $1718 for enrollees with diabetes and cardiovascular disease. The greatest savings were seen for reduction in hospitalizations.

 

The OHNEP program recommends inclusion of preventive dental care and conservative (non-surgical) periodontal treatment as needed for persons with DM to reduce inflammation and infections, thereby contributing to improvement in health outcomes and cost avoidance/savings in health care utilization/resources. 

 

Respiratory Conditions. Poor oral health is associated with respiratory infections like pneumonia. Pneumonia the #1 cause of hospital acquired infections and especially common in older adults (Munro et al., 2021). Epidemiological studies show that organisms causing pneumonia are identical pathogens to those isolated from the teeth of intubated patients with ventilator acquired pneumonia (VAP) (Heo et al., 2008). Data from systematic reviews support that improved oral hygiene in hospital and nursing home settings reduces the risk of pneumonia (Sjogren et al., 2016; Zhao et al., 2020; Liang et al., 2021). Oral hygiene protocols administered in hospital intensive care settings is most often provided by the nursing staff.

 

Non-ventilator hospital acquired pneumonia (NV-HAP) has been recognized as a significant, but largely preventable cause of hospital acquired infections. NV-HAP comprises 60% of the cases of hospital-acquired pneumonia (Munro et al., 2021). NVHAP accounts for over $3 billion in healthcare costs annually in the U.S. (Munro, et al., 2022). In acute care settings, there is a body of evidence on the role of oral care for NV-HAP prevention. A Veterans’ Health Administration (VHA) interprofessional team, led by nurse researchers, have scaled a nursing staff administered oral hygiene protocol across the VHA system to 155 hospitals and long-term-care facilities, where they have demonstrated NV-HAP reductions up to 92% with significant related cost avoidance (Munro & Baker, 2019).

 

A related association between oral health and lung disease has been documented for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary disease (COPD). While the primary driver of COPD is chronic long-term tobacco smoking, evidence supports the impact of poor oral hygiene and periodontal disease as exacerbators of COPD progression. Findings of studies reveal that reduced lung function is associated with severity of periodontal disease (Scannapieco & Ho, 2001; Sanz et al., 2020) a number of clinical trials support that periodontal therapy in the form of scaling and root planning can reduce the risk of COPD progression (Kelly et al., 2021).

 

Estimates suggest that a single case of VAP incurs additional treatment costs of $28-$40,000 (Giuliano et al., 2018; Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, 2017). Alternatively, consider the cost of providing preventive oral hygiene resources for hospital and long-term care patients at the bedside that cost a few dollars per day, plus time to implement an oral hygiene protocol as a reportable quality improvement indicator as a NVHAP reduction and cost savings/avoidance strategy (Munro & Baker, 2018; Munro et al., 2021; Sekiya et al., 2021).

 

The OHNEP program recommends inclusion of preventive dental care, including oral hygiene protocols, for older adults at risk for pneumonia, especially prior to hospitalization, surgery, and in long term care settings. We also recommend as preventive dental care and conservative (non-surgical) periodontal treatment as needed for persons with COPD to reduce inflammation and infections, thereby contributing to improvement in health outcomes and cost avoidance/savings in health care utilization/resources. 

 

Immunosuppression

Cancer. Cancers, including leukemias, lymphomas, and solid tumors (and tumors/lesions of the oral cavity and oropharynx), are the second leading cause of death in the United States after heart disease. In 2020, an estimated 1,806,590 persons were newly diagnosed with cancer and 606,520 died. In the U.S., cancer is diagnosed more frequently in men than women. Advancing age is the number one risk factor for cancer; more than two thirds of all new cancers are diagnosed among adults aged 60 years and older, i.e., the Medicare population. As the number of adults living to old age increases, so will the number of new cancer cases (CDC, 2021).

 

National expenditures in 2018 for cancer care in the U.S. were $150.8 billion. (National Cancer Institute, 2020). Costs will increase as the population ages, more people are diagnosed with cancer, and as new and more expensive treatments become the standard of care (American Cancer Society, 2022; National Cancer Institute, 2020).

 

There is a close association of cancer and oral disease. There are many manifestations of cancer treatment and its side effects in the oral cavity, especially for older adults. Medicare provides coverage for treatment of medical services but does not provide a dental benefit for older adults, not even in medically necessary cases like cancer. Coordinated, collaborative care available in hospital and community settings, including dental care, is crucial before, during and after cancer care to maximize clinical outcomes, decrease cost, and improve quality of life and patient experience (Triple Aim). Major cancer treatment modalities, besides surgery, cause immunosuppression and include, but are not limited to, chemotherapy, radiation, immunotherapy, and stem cell and bone marrow transplants. Adjuvant therapy agents interrupt cell metabolism, inhibit cell division, and cause cell death to rapidly proliferating cancer cells and healthy, normal cells in bone marrow, mucosal cells in the digestive tract (including the oral cavity) and hair follicle cells. The results are bone marrow suppression, and immunosuppression with systemic and oral side effects (Acharya et al., 2019; Parisi & Glick, 2003; Keefe & Bateman, 2019).

 

A significant concern, especially for older adults, is that immunosuppression increases the potential for sepsis and risk for infections like mucositis, both of which increase the risk for morbidity and mortality. Sepsis can disrupt cancer therapy, and delay and reduce survival (Riley et al., 2017). Cancer patients are estimated to account for 16.4% of sepsis cases per 1000 people and are ten times more likely to develop sepsis than non-cancer patients (Acharya et al., 2019; Gudiol et al., 2021). The mortality rate for cancer patients who develop sepsis is 20-40%. Two thirds of sepsis cases occur in people over 60.

 

Physicians and nurses, as well as other members of the oncology team, care for patients who experience the complications and side effects of their cancer treatment. Oral pathogens are commonly isolated in potentially life-threatening chemotherapy-induced neutropenic fever and sepsis. Mucositis, a painful side effect of chemotherapy and/or radiation, affects the oral cavity and digestive tract, and involves inflammation, as well as painful sores and ulcers in the mouth and throughout the digestive tract. Other serious oral complications include oral bleeding, candidiasis, salivary changes, xerostomia, dysgeusia and medically-related osteonecrosis of the jaw (MRONJ). Oral health problems related to poor oral hygiene, tooth decay, and periodontal disease present at the time of diagnosis, or during treatment or recovery escalate the risk for treatment side effects and complications like mucositis and sepsis that increase resource utilization and cost (Paoli et al., 2018; Phonsuphot et al., 2021).

 

Elting and Chang (2019), report that the incremental cost of oral mucositis among patients receiving radiation therapy is approximately $5,000-30,000 and $3,700 per cycle among patients receiving chemotherapy. The incremental cost of mucositis-related hospitalization among stem cell transplants may exceed $70,000 per patient. Ongoing management of xerostomia is reported to cost $40-200 per month (Elting & Chang, 2019). The primary drivers of cost are hospitalizations, rehospitalizations, parenteral and enteral feedings, febrile neutropenia, and chronic use of interventions like sialagogues. Cancer patients who develop sepsis and/or septic shock, represent a disproportionately high burden in terms of hospital utilization, intensity of resource use, and excess cost of ~$30,000 per patient, and are estimated to double cancer care costs (Tew et al., 2021).

 

Preventive dental care, oral hygiene care, and dental treatments to eliminate oral infection are medically necessary in cancer therapy (Acharya et al., 2019; Parisi & Glick, 2003; Ishimaru et al., 2018; Saito et al., 2014). For example, a study conducted by Owosho and colleagues (2018) at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) with >2000 patients treated for cancer reported a twelve-fold decrease in the incidence of MRONJ for patients who had pre-treatment dental exams and removal of all dental decay in comparison to those who had no dental pretreatment. These findings are supported by data from other studies (Dimopoulos, 2009; Ripamonti, 2009; Bonacina, 2011; Bramanti, 2014). The MSKCC evidence provided support for MSKCC’s implementation of a pre-treatment dental care protocol with follow up dental care every three months for 24 months.

 

There are increased risks for compromising clinical outcomes and increasing the cost burden of cancer care when treatment plans do not include dental screening, preventive dental care, and dental procedures that precede chemotherapy, radiation, and bone marrow transplants. Dental care should be included before and when critically necessary during treatment, and continued as ongoing oral health care until immunosuppression is resolved (Riley et al., 2018; Ishimaru et al., 2018; Saito et al., 2014). Since ~66% of cancer occurs in older adults, these additional costs and poor clinical outcomes have a significant negative effect on CMS costs.

 

The OHNEP program recommends that CMS provide a medically necessary dental benefit for preventive, diagnostic, periodontal, caries removal, extractions, and management of oral side effects of cancer treatment in both inpatient or community settings and cover reconstruction essential to restoring capacity to eat, drink, and swallow to maintain nutrition and overall health. The evidence supports that this dental benefit should begin prior to beginning cancer therapy and continue as appropriate during treatment and continue post-treatment until immunosuppression ends, infections are resolved, and restorative interventions when indicated are completed.

 

Transplantation. Age is no longer a contraindication to transplantation. Nearly 25% of people on solid organ transplant waitlists are 65 years of age and older (Hemmersbach-Miller et al., 2021). These lifesaving procedures include, but are not limited to the kidney, lung, heart, liver, and pancreas. Nurses provide care for people with chronic conditions like end stage renal disease (ESRD), severe diabetes, advanced heart or lung disease, and liver disease who are candidates for transplants that replace their damaged solid organs (Parisi & Glick, 2019). They understand how poor oral health, including decay and gum disease, negatively impact optimal clinical outcomes. The five-year survival rate for single solid organ transplants is > 70% for kidney, liver, and pancreas transplants (Hanrahan et al., 2021; Gil et al., 2018; Shyr et al., 2021). Life-threatening infections related to the weakened immune systems of older adults (immunosenescence) and transplant- related immunosuppression are serious complications of transplantation. Older adults are at increased risk for infectious complications following solid organ transplants (Hemmersbach-Miller et al., 2021).

 

Kidney transplant patients have additional concerns related to being on dialysis where they develop significant co-morbid conditions like portal hypertension. Moreover, evidence shows that oral disease is prevalent in the renal dialysis community; up to 50% of individuals in dialysis units have less than standard dental care and unsatisfactory oral health status. Most dental care is performed on an emergency basis, thereby supporting that there is often longstanding oral disease prior to transplantation that may be a barrier to having this life and cost saving treatment (Provenzano, 2005).

 

Oral health is also important for clinical outcomes prior to and after heart transplantation. Gruter and Brand (2020) reported that patients who underwent heart transplant and followed an immunosuppression regimen, had a higher risk of gingival hyperplasia, periodontitis, Candida infections, xerostomia, and a 4.3 times higher chance of developing oral malignancies in comparison to healthy individuals. Persons with end stage liver disease have comorbid conditions, including dental infections that can postpone being listed for a transplant (Guggenheimer et al., 2007). Åberg and colleagues (2014) reported that one of the last clearances presented to their Liver Transplant Board is the oral health status of the transplant candidate.

 

High rates of poor oral health, including periodontal disease and xerostomia, are risk factors for compromising successful transplant outcomes. Infection is a risk factor for poor prognosis, and associated with malnutrition, wasting syndrome and increased levels of local and systemic inflammation. Transplant patients typically take multiple medications involving long-term use of immunosuppressive drugs, as well as multiple medications for co-morbidities like diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Schonfeld and colleagues (2019) provide evidence that screening for and treatment of oral inflammation and infections, including decay (extractions, fillings), gingivitis, and periodontitis (scaling and root planing), must begin pre-transplantation and continue as appropriate post-transplantation, after 3-6 months, to prevent sepsis and organ rejection until immunosuppression is resolved. But for dental problems being resolved and/or stabilized, thereby lowering the risk for Infection and sepsis pre-transplant, this medical/surgical procedure may not be able to proceed.

 

The OHNEP program recommends that candidates for solid organ transplants be required to have a dental assessment/ screening for and treatment of decay and infections like periodontal disease prior to and following transplant surgery that potentially compromise the outcomes of surgery (including organ rejection).

 

Conclusion

Thank you for the opportunity to provide comments about the Administration’s proposal to provide medically necessary oral and dental Medicare coverage. While the nursing profession will not be providing the dental care, we can contribute to implementing oral hygiene assessment and intervention protocols, promoting lifestyle changes, and improving oral health literacy. Improving oral health will improve overall health for older adults, quality of life, and health equity for our nation’s seniors. The OHNEP program is confident that the proposed implementation of a medically necessary dental benefit will lower overall healthcare costs and make an important contribution to improving health outcomes for older adults, especially those with targeted NCDs, cancer, and in need of organ transplantation. The Oral Health Nursing Education and Practice (OHNEP) program is available to serve as a clinical resource as continuing progress is made as, together, we collaborate on improving the oral health and overall health of America’s older adults. 

 

Very truly yours,

Judith Haber, PhD, APRN, FAAN

Ursula Springer Leadership Professor in Nursing

Executive Director, OHNEP Program

 

References:

 

Åberg, F., Helenius-Hietala, J., Meurman, J., & Isoniemi, H. (2014). Association between dental infections and the clinical course of chronic liver disease. Hepatology Research, 44(3), 349-353. https://doi.org/10.1111/hepr.12126.

 

Acharya, A. Geist, S.-M. R. Y., Powell, V. & Torres-Urquidy, M.H. (2019). Chapter 3: An environmental scan of the various oral-systemic contact points. In Acharya, A. Powell, V., Torres-Urquidy, M.H., Posteraro, R.H., & Thyvalikakath, T.P. (Eds.), Integration of medical and dental care and patient data (2nd ed., pp.35-46).

 

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. (2017, November 1). Estimating the additional hospital inpatient cost and mortality associated with selected hospital-acquired conditions. https://www.ahrq.gov/hai/pfp/haccost2017.html.

 

American Cancer Society. (2022). Cancer facts and figures. https://www.cancer.org/content/dam/cancer-org/research/cancer-facts-and-statistics/an- nual-cancer-facts-and-figures/2022/2022-cancer-facts-and-figures.pdf

 

Bonacina, R., Mariani, U., Villa, F., & Villa, A. (2011). Preventive strategies and clinical implications for bisphosphonate-related osteonecrosis of the jaw: A review of 282 patients. Journal of the Canadian Dental Association, 77, b147. https://jcda.ca/article/b147.

 

Borah, B.J., Brotman S.G., Dholakia, R., Dvoroznak, S., Jansen, M.T., Murphy, E.A. & Naessens, J.M. (2022). Association between preventive dental care and health- care cost for enrollees with diabetes or coronary heart disease: 5-year experience. Compendium of Continuing Education in Dentistry, 43(3), 130-139. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35272460/.

 

Bramati, A., Girelli, S., Farina, G., Dazzani, M.C., Torri, V., Moretti, A., Piva, S., Dimaiuta, M., & La Verde, N. (2015). Prospective, mono-institutional study of the impact of a systematic prevention program on incidence and outcome of osteonecrosis of the jaw in patients treated with bisphosphonates for bone metastases. Journal of Bone and Mineral Metabolism, 33(1), 119-124. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00774-014-0566-x.

 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2021, September 3). Cancer prevention during older adulthood. Retrieved August 3, 2022, from https://www.cdc.gov/cancer/dcpc/prevention/older-adulthood.htm.

 

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2022, January 18). National diabetes statistics report. https://www.cdc.gov/diabetes/data/statistics-report/index.html.

 

Dimopoulos, M.A., Kastritis, E., Bamia, C., Melakopoulos, I., Gika, D., Roussou, M., Migkou, M., Eleftherakis-Papaiakovou, E., Christoulas, S., Terpos, E., & Bamias, A. (2009). Reduction of osteonecrosis of the jaw (ONJ) after implementation of preventive measures in patients with multiple myeloma treated with zoledronic acid. Annual Oncology, 20(1), 117-120. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdn554.

 

Elting, L.S. & Chang, Y. (2019). Costs of oral complications of cancer therapies: estimates and a blueprint for future study. Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 53, 116-123. https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimonographs/lgz010.

 

Freed, M., Ochieng, N., Sroczynski, N., Damico, A., & Amin, K. (2021, July 28). Medicare and dental coverage: A closer look. Kaiser Family Foundation. https://www.kff.org/medicare/issue-brief/medicare-and-dental-coverage-a-closer-look/.

 

Gil, E., Kim, J.M., Jeon, K., Park, H., Kang, D., Cho, J., Suh, G.Y., & Park, J. (2018). Recipient age and mortality after liver transplantation: A population based cohort study. Transplantation, 102(12), 2025-2032. https://doi.org/10.1097/TP.0000000000002246.

 

Giuliano, K.K., Baker, D., & Quinn, B. (2018). The epidemiology of nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia in the United States. American Journal of Infection Control, 46(3), 322-327. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajic.2017.09.005.

 

Gruter, M.O. & Brand, H.S. (2020). Oral health complications after a heart transplant: A review. British Dental Journal, 228(3), 177-182. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41415-020-1244-0.

 

Gudiol, C., Albasanz-Puig, A., Cuervo, G., & Carratalà, J. (2021). Understanding and managing sepsis in patients with cancer in the era of antimicrobial resistance. Frontiers in Medicine, 8, 636547. https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.636547.

 

Guggenheimer, J., Eghtesad, B., Close, J.M., Shay, C., & Fung, J. (2007). Dental health status of liver transplant candidates. Liver Transplantation, 13(2), 280-286. https://doi.org/10.1002/It.201038.

 

Hariharan, S., Israni, A.K., & Danovitch, G. (2021). Long-term survival after kidney transplantation. The New England Journal of Medicine, 385, 729-743. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMra2014530.

 

Hemmersbach-Miller, M., Wolfe, C.R., & Schmader, K.E. (2019). Solid organ transplantation in older adults. Infectious and other age-related considerations. OBM Transplant, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.21926/obm.transplant.1901046.

 

Heo, S.M., Haase, E.M., Lesse, A.J., Gill, S.R., & Scannapieco, F.A. (2008). Genetic relationships between respiratory pathogens isolated from dental plaque and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from patients in the intensive care unit undergoing mechanical ventilation. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 47(12), 1562-1570. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3582026/.

 

Ishimaru, M., Matsui, H., Ono, S., Hagiwara, Y., Morita, K., & Yasunaga, H. (2018). Preoperative oral care and effect on postoperative complications after major cancer surgery. British Journal of Surgery, 105(12), 1688-1696. https://doi.org/10.1002/bjs.10915.

 

Jeffcoat, M.K., Jeffcoat, R.L., Gladowski, P.A., Bramson, J.B., & Blum, J.J. (2014). Impact of periodontal therapy on general health: Evidence from insurance data for

five systemic diseases. American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 47(2), 166-174. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2014.04.001.

 

Keefe, D.M. & Bateman, E.H. (2019). Potential successes and challenges of targeted cancer therapies. Journal of the National Cancer Institute. Monographs, (53), 25-29. https://doi.org/10.1093/jncimonographs/lgz008.

 

Kelly, N., Winning, L., Irwin, C., Lundy, F.T., Linden, D., McGarvey, L., Linden, G.J., & El Karim, I.A. (2021). Periodontal status and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbations: A systematic review. BMC Oral Health, 21(1): 425. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-021-01757-z.

 

Lamster, I.B. (Ed.). (2014). Diabetes mellitus and oral health: An interprofessional approach. John Wiley & Sons.

 

Lamster, I., Malloy, K.P., DiMura, P.M., Cheng, B., Wagner, V.L., Matson, J., Proj, A., Xi, Y., Abel, S.N., & Alfano, M.C. (2021). Dental services and health outcomes in the New York State Medicaid program. Journal of Dental Research, 100(9), 928-934. https://doi.org/10.1177/00220345211007448.

 

Liang, S., Zhang, X., Hu, Y., Yang, J., & Li, K. (2021). Association between perioperative chlorhexidine oral care and postoperative pneumonia in non-cardiac surgical patients: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Surgery 170(5), 1418-1431. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.surg.2021.05.008.

 

Munro, S. & Baker, D. (2019). Integrating oral health care into patient management to prevent hospital-acquired pneumonia: A team approach. Journal of the Michigan Dental Association, 2019. https://www.michigandental.org/Portals/pro/Journals/July%202019/html5/index.html?page=1&noflash.

 

Munro, S. & Baker, D. (2018). Reducing missed oral care opportunities to prevent non-ventilator associated hospital acquired pneumonia at the Department of Veterans Affairs. Applied Nursing Research, 44, 48-53. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apnr.2018.09.004.

 

Munro, S., Baker, D., Giuliano, K., Sullivan, S.C., Haber, J., Jones, B., Crist, M., Nelson, R.E., Carey, E., Lounsbury, O., Lucatorto, M., Miller, R., Pauley, B., & Klompas, M. (2021). Nonventilator hospital-acquired pneumonia: A call to action. Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 42(8), 991-996. https://doi.org/10.1017/ice.2021.239.

 

Munro, S., Phillips, T., Hasselbeck, R., Lucatorto, M.A., Hehr, A., & Ochylski, S. (2022). Implementing oral care as a nursing intervention to reduce hospital-acquired pneumonia across the United States Department of Veterans Affairs Healthcare System. Computers, Informatics, Nursing, 40(1), 35-43. https://doi.org/10.1097/CIN.0000000000000808.

 

Nasseh, K., Vujicic, M., & Glick, M. (2016). The relationship between periodontal interventions and health care costs and utilization: Evidence from an integrated dental, medical and pharmacy commercial database. Health Economics, 26(4), 519-527. https://doi.org/10.1002/hec.3316.

 

National Cancer Institute. (2020, September 25). Cancer statistics. Retrieved August 3, 2022, from https://www.cancer.gov/about-cancer/understanding/statistics.

 

Owosho, A.A., Liang, S.T.Y., Sax, A.Z., Wu, K., Yom, S.K., Huryn, J.M., & Estilo, C.L. (2018). Medication-related osteonecrosis of the jaw: An update on the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center experience and the role of premedication dental evaluation in prevention. Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology, Oral Radiology, 125(5), 440-445. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.oooo.2018.02.003.

 

Paoli, C.J., Reynolds, M.A., Sinha, M., et al. (2018). Epidemiology and costs of sepsis in the United States—an analysis based on timing of diagnosis and severity level. Critical Care Medicine, 46(12), 1889-1897. https://doi.org/10.1097/CCM.0000000000003342.

 

Parisi, E.P. & Glick, M.G. (2003). Immune suppression and considerations for dental care. Dental Clinics of North America, 47, 709-731. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0011-8532(03)00038-7.

 

Parker, M.L., Thornton-Evans, G., Wei, L., & Griffin, S.O. (2020). Prevalence of and changes in tooth loss among adults aged ≥50 years with selected chronic conditions - United States, 1999-2004 and 2011-2016. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, 69(21). https://dx.doi.org/10.15585/mmwr.mm6921a1.

 

Phongsuphot, K., Chimruang, J., Intapa, C. (2021). Incidence and severity of oral mucositis in adult and elderly cancer patients after receiving chemotherapy in Uttaradit Hospital. CM Dental Journal, 42(1):159-172.

 

Provenzano, R.P. (2005, July 1). The importance of dental care for transplant patients. St. Clair Nephrology. https://www.scsp.net/articles/the-importance-of-dental-care-for-transplant-recipients/

 

Riley, P., Glenny, A., Worthington, H.V., Littlewood, A., Fernandez-Mauleffinch, L., Clarkson, J.E., & McCabe, M.G. (2017) Interventions for preventing oral mucositis in patients with cancer receiving treatment: Cytokines and growth factors. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 11, CD011990. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858CD01990.pub2.

 

Ripamonti, C.I., Maniezzo, M., Campa, T., Fagnoni, E., Brunelli, C., Saibene, G., Bareggi, C., Ascani, L., & Cislaghi, E. (2009). Decreased occurrence of osteonecrosis of the jaw after implementation of dental preventive measures in solid tumour patients with bone metastases treated with bisphosphonates. The experience of the National Cancer Institute of Milan. Annual Oncology, 20(1), 137-145. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdn526.

 

Saito, H., Watanabe, Y., Sato, K., Ikawa, H., Yoshida, Y., Katakura, A., Takayama, S & Sato, M. (2014). Effects of professional oral healthcare on reducing risk of chemotherapy-induced oral mucositis. Support Care Cancer, 22(11): 2935-2940. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-014-2282-4.

 

Sanz, M., Del Castillo, A.M., Jepsen, S., Gonzalez-Juanatey, J.R., D’Aiuto, F., Bouchard, P., Chapple, I., Dietrich, T., Gotsman, I., Graziani, F., Herrera, D., Loos, B., Madianos, P., Michel, J.B., Perel, P., Pieske, B., Shapira, L., Shechter, M., Tonetti, M., … Wimmer, G. (2020). Periodontitis and cardiovascular diseases. Consensus report. Global Heart, 15(1):1. https://doi.org/10.5334/gh.400.

 

Scannapieco, F.A. & Ho, A.W. (2001). Potential associations between chronic respiratory disease and periodontal disease: Analysis of National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III. Journal of Periodontology, 72(1): 50-56. https://doi.org/10.1902/jop.2001.72.1.50.

 

Schonfeld, E.A. & Brown, R.S. (2019). Genetic causes of liver disease: when to suspect a genetic etiology, initial lab testing, and the basics of management. Medical Clinics of North America, 103(6), 991-1003. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mcna.2019.07.003.

 

Sekiya, H., Kurasawa, Y., Maruoka, Y., Mukohyama, H., Negishi, A., Shigematsu, S., Sugizaki, J., Ohashi, M., Hasegawa, S., Kobayashi, Y., Ueno, M., & Michiwaki, Y. (2021). Cost-effectiveness analysis of perioperative oral management after cancer surgery and an examination of the reduction in medical costs thereafter: A multicenter study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(14), 7453. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18147453.

 

Shyr, B.U., Shyr, B.S., Chen, S.C., Shyr, Y.M., & Wang, S.E. (2021). Inferior survival outcomes of pancreas transplant alone in uremic patients. Scientific Reports, 11, 21073. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-00621-y.

 

Simpson, T.C., Clarkson, J.E., Worthington, H.V., MacDonald, L., Weldon, J.C., Needleman, I., Iheozor-Ejiofor, Z., Wild, S.H., Qureshi, A., Walker, A., Patel, V.A., Boyers, D., Twigg, J. (2022). Treatment of periodontitis for glycaemic control in people with diabetes mellitus. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 4, CD004714. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD004714.pub4.

 

Singer, M., Deutschman, C.S., Seymour, C.W., Shankar-Hari, M., Annane, D., Bauer, M., Bellomo, R., Bernard, G.R., Chiche, J., Coopersmith, C.M., Hotchkiss, R.S., Levy, M.M., Marshall, J.C., Martin, G.S., Opal, S.M., Rubenfeld, G.D., van der Poll, T., Vincent, J., & Angus, D.C. (2016). The third international consensus definitions for sepsis and septic shock (sepsis-3). Journal of the American Medical Association, 315(8), 801-810. https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2016.0287.

 

Sjogren, P., Wardh, I., Zimmerman, M., Almstahl, A., & Wikstrom, M. (2016). Oral care and mortality in older adults with pneumonia in hospitals or nursing homes: Systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of the American Geriatric Society, 64(10), 2109-2115. https://doi.org/10.1111/jgs.14260.

 

Tew, M., Dalziel, K., Thursky, K., Krahn, M., Abrahamayan, L., Morris, A.M., & Clarke, P. (2021). Excess cost of care associated with sepsis in cancer patients: Results from a population-based case-control matched cohort. PLoS ONE, 16(8), e0255107. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0255107.

 

Zhao, T., Wu, X., Zhang, Q., Li, C., Worthington, H.V., & Hua, F. (2020). Oral hygiene care for critically ill patients to prevent ventilator-associated pneumonia. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 12, CD008367. https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD008367.pub4.

ORAL HEALTH LITERACY

We have created oral health literacy products that are designed to be user-friendly, easy to understand, and aim to improve patients' oral health literacy by providing information about how oral health and overall health are connected for many health conditions and across the lifespan. 

ORAL HEALTH PATIENT FACTS

The OHNEP Program and the American College of Physicians (ACP) created four patient-centered oral health literacy fact sheets for distribution to internal medicine physicians and primary care providers. Written in an easily accessible engaging style, in both English and Spanish, with high-quality relatable imagery, the Oral Health Patient Facts were designed to be user-friendly, easy to understand, and aim to improve patients' oral health literacy by providing information about how oral health and overall health are connected. 

Oral Health and You / La salud bucal y usted

Oral Health and Diabetes / La salud bucal y la diabetes

Oral Health and Older Adults / La salud bucal y los adultos de edad avanzada

Oral Health and HPV / La salud bucal y el virus del papiloma humano

SAFE AND SOUND: THE HPV VACCINE

One of the leading causes of oral cancer is HPV. The HPV vaccine is the most effective form of prevention against HPV-associated cancers and illnesses, and is highly effective in preventing most serious types of HPV. There are many misconceptions surrounding HPV transmission and the HPV vaccine, and it is important to know that the HPV vaccine can be safely administered to teen children starting between ages 9-12 and for adults through age 45. 

Safe and Sound: The HPV Vaccine

ORAL HEALTH AND COVID-19

The OHNEP team has created these oral health and hygiene tip sheets to share with your colleagues, clinical partners, students, and patients to remind them about the importance of taking care of oral health as a vital link to overall health during a pandemic.

Caring For Your Teeth During COVID-19

Special Care for Your Braces During COVID-19