Not only do we pride ourselves on our research, we also strive for excellence in public health practice—applying data and science in the real world. We partner with communities here in Colorado, across the U.S., and around the world, promoting health and wellbeing for all. We work collaboratively with students, faculty, and community members, building lasting relationships, listening to those who identify needs in their community, and engaging in life-long learning together.
We convene diverse groups by hosting symposiums and forming collaborative working groups. We also offer practice-intensive graduate courses, community events, and professional development opportunities such as in-person trainings and online courses. In addition, our experts regularly work
with community leaders, nonprofits, businesses, and policymakers to develop evidence-based public health interventions that work. With a framework of health equity and justice guiding us, we study the barriers to health and the most effective ways
to help build a world in which all people have the opportunity to be safe, healthy, and well.
With the passage of HB21-1317 (Regulating Marijuana Concentrates), our school has been tasked with researching the health effects of high-potency THC marijuana and concentrates and providing related policy recommendations.
The COVID-19 Modeling Team, led by ColoradoSPH researchers, develops models that project the future of the pandemic in Colorado based on various policies and data.
While oral healthcare has dramatically improved over the past 20 years, especially in digital technology and restorative dentistry, access to routine and preventative care remains a significant problem in the United States.
That is one of the key messages in a new report by the National Institutes of Health. The report—Oral Health in America: Advances and Challenges—is a follow-up to the 2000 Surgeon General report on the state of the country’s oral health. Almost a dozen multidisciplinary experts at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus contributed to the new report, including co-project directors Bruce Dye, DDS, MPH, and Judith Albino, president emerita at the University of Colorado and professor emerita at CU Anschutz.
Dye, previously director of the Dental Public Health and Health Informatics Fellowship at the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, came to the CU School of Dental Medicine in October. He is the Delta Dental Endowed Chair in Early Childhood Caries Prevention and professor and chair of the Department of Community Dentistry and Population Health.
Dye said the report was a massive project, involving over 300 experts nationwide. “In the dental world, this is probably one of the most important things that happens in a decade because it really provides guidance on dental research, education and practice,” Dye said. “Maybe only three or four other schools nationwide had as many participants as the University of Colorado. We are well-represented.”
Below, Dye shares his thoughts on some of the findings in the new report as well as the general state of oral healthcare in the United States.
When we think about the first report, it was significant that it began to really inform the public about the importance oral health has in overall health. It really strengthened the old saying that the mouth is part of the body; it’s not a separate entity. Also, it’s not just about teeth. It’s about all the things that influence oral health. This report really strengthens the interconnection between oral health and overall health; it makes it abundantly clear that oral health is integral to overall health and quality of life.
Also, this report points out that even though we’ve made all of these fantastic advances, we still have a lot of remaining challenges, with one of the most important being access to care. We still have some serious issues with access to care.
Out-of-pocket dental expenditures are a very important concern. In our country, we have an unusual situation in that we’re almost at 100% universal dental health coverage for kids because of either private insurance or public insurance like Medicaid, Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) and coverage under the Affordable Care Act (ACA). So, over 90% of kids have dental insurance. The out-of-pocket expenditures for kids is not nearly what it is for working-age adults whose insurance is mostly based on their employer. About 2 out of 3 adults have some type of dental insurance.
It's even worse for older adults. At least half of senior citizens don’t have dental insurance. For those who do, many are buying insurance through a Medicare Advantage plan, so it’s an out-of-pocket expense. So, you go from almost universal dental coverage for kids to only half of the older-adult population who are covered. Out-of-pocket dental costs become a bigger issue the older you get.
Also, compared to the pharmacy and even mental health expenditures, dental care is more likely to be deferred because of costs, especially for working-age adults. It’s driven by tight budgets and costs for care, so working-age adults and seniors are more likely to defer dental care.
We’ve had substantial advances in science and technology – it has dramatically improved the delivery of dental care in the last 20 years – but that has not helped everyone. Technology is great, and we can do a lot of things now that were only aspirational two decades ago, but the societal tradeoff is increasing oral health disparities because the higher costs associated with newer technologies is a major driver of dental costs affecting affordability of care for many.
One of the most fascinating advances has been in the area of everything being digitized. The current generation of dental students are learning things that were a dream 20 years ago. Digital records, radiographs, images, impressions, intraoral scanning and fabricating. These things have made things easier for patients. They can now get crowns and dentures made and delivered more accurately and quickly. Dental implants have also exploded in the last 20 years in use with newer technologies and treatment generating substantially better outcomes for people. Technology has really advanced some of the ways we deliver care, but all of that has been with the more expensive type of treatments.
Other great advances in science and technology that are helping us to learn more about oral health are related to discoveries in the oral microbiome, plus the advances in genomics, gene-editing technology like CRISPR. The promise of this new knowledge is laying the groundwork for more precision oral healthcare.
The understanding of the role that social determinants play in health and in disease has expanded dramatically in the last 20 years, in both oral health and overall health. I think of the social determinants of health broadly – such as where we live, where we work, the community in which we live, our families – all of those influence health and health outcomes. Age, sex, race and ethnicity, our cultural influences play a role, too. One of the most important factors is our zip code: It can be very predictive about what our prevalence of disease is, what our incidence of disease is going to be, how our health outcomes may change as we age.
This is definitely an area in which we have substantially more information (compared to 2000), but it’s also an area that’s very hard to translate into effective change when you think about the regular doctor-patient relationship, because that relationship can’t change the social determinants that affect health. That requires a public policy intervention rather than a clinical chair-side intervention. It’s not just scientists, clinicians and patients all trying to do the right thing on the individual level, but there’s also a societal requirement for interventions at the community level. For example, poverty elimination alone would go a long way toward helping a lot of people enjoy much better health outcomes.
I remind people that COVID was a shock to dentistry much in the same way that HIV was. HIV really introduced this whole notion of heightened infection control and the processes that dentists use now. That epidemic really incentivized dentists to wear gloves and masks, to expand sterilization and disinfection procedures to ensure that transmission of the virus in a dental practice was virtually impossible. Many people forget that back in the early ’80s, dentists were not routinely wearing gloves.
COVID’s done the same thing. It’s required us to revisit our infection control procedures and improve our protocols to really ensure patient safety in delivering care. Unlike the HIV epidemic, there was a widespread temporary closure of dental practices due to lock-down measures. Nationwide, I believe general dental practices are now up to about 75% capacity, and the whole dental economy is trying to get back to pre-pandemic levels. The negative effect has been a significant increase in unmet and deferred dental care.
An odd byproduct of the pandemic has been a greater recognition of how essential dental care is. Early in the pandemic, when many states were legislating closures, they exempted essential medical care. In many cases, dental practices were not exempted because it was not considered essential. This was raised at the national level by a number of organizations, and it has created a movement toward recognizing dental care as essential healthcare. That’s been a positive step, because it circles back to that whole notion about oral health being integral to overall health.
I would say it’s the issue with our senior citizens. Our country is aging fast. According to the census, we’ll have more older adults than youths – ages 18 and younger – by 2034. Just three years earlier, the census predictions said that would happen by 2035 – so it’s accelerating.
When you add that half of the older adult population is not covered by dental insurance, that’s a big issue. People are living longer, they’re living with more chronic diseases, resulting in conditions that reduce one’s quality of life. Tooth decay and gum disease are chronic diseases and deferred treatment can lead to pain, infection and tooth loss. Having a dental benefit in Medicare or some other type of insurance would be helpful, but we need to figure out a way to provide some sort of dental coverage to improve access to care for older adults. The CU Multidisciplinary Center on Aging recently reported that Colorado is now the fastest-growing state for those 65 and older.
I would say one of the most important advances in the last 20 years has benefited those on the early side of the lifespan – the reduction in untreated tooth decay in preschool children – as the prevalence has nearly been cut in half. We went through decades where the prevalence remained virtually unchanged, and then all at once prevalence declined dramatically right after the mid-2000s. I believe that’s a great example of what improving access to care can do. This was around the time of CHIP reauthorization, Medicaid expansion, the ACA was enacted and the children age group benefited most as many uninsured kids got dental insurance. There were other important activities around that time too, such as professional organizations encouraging caregivers to have the first dental visit at age 1. So, substantially tooth decay, which is the most prevalent disease worldwide, among preschool kids, is a really important milestone for the country.
This article originally appeared in CU Anschutz Today.
CU Anschutz
Fitzsimons Building
13001 East 17th Place
3rd Floor
Mail Stop B119
Aurora, CO 80045