|
Public Health
Aspects of Tobacco Control: Setting the Agenda for
Action by Oral Health Professions Across Europe
Watt, Richard G./Benzian, Habib/Binnie, Viv/Gafner,
Christine/Hovius, Marjoljin/Newton, Tim J./Mecklenburg,
Robert E.
Oral Health Prev Dent 4 (2006), No 1,
Page 19-26
Tobacco use is a significant public health problem
across Europe. Each year over half a million Europeans
die prematurely due to a smoking-related disease.
Tobacco use is a primary cause of many oral diseases and
adverse oral conditions. The prevalence of tobacco use
varies considerably across Europe, although in many
countries overall rates of use have declined in recent
years. However, tobacco use among women and young people
is rising in several European countries. Tobacco
behaviour is influenced by an array of factors, and
quitting is a major challenge for many tobacco users.
Tobacco use is now considered a chronic progressive
relapsing condition requiring very specific support and
assistance. To reduce tobacco use across Europe, a range
of complementary actions and policies are required at an
international, national and local level. The WHO
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) outlines
an array of evidence-based policies that can be
implemented to prevent tobacco use and promote cessation.
National dental associations and professional groups
across Europe have an important role to play in
supporting the ratification and implementation of the
FCTC. The aim of this paper is to outline the public
health aspects of tobacco control and highlight how the
oral health professions across Europe can become
actively engaged in this important and relevant area of
prevention.
Evaluation of
Tobacco Use Cessation (TUC) Counselling in the Dental
Office
Needleman, Ian/Warnakulasuriya, Saman/Sutherland,
Gay/Bornstein, Michael M./Casals, Elias/Dietrich,
Thomas/Suvan, Jean
Oral Health Prev Dent 4 (2006), No 1,
Page 27-47
Tobacco use cessation (TUC) in dentistry is critical to
reducing the effect of a major risk factor for both oral
and systematic diseases. The effect of TUC interventions
has been widely reported. The data show that the success
of TUC without professional support is negligible but
that behavioural and pharmacological interventions are
effective. Furthermore, the greater the intensity of
support, the greater the quit rate and success rates are
similar comparing different health care professionals
including dental professionals. Although few studies
have been performed in dental practice, it is clear that
TUC should be embedded in routine oral health care. In
addition to evaluating the effect of TUC, several
studies have investigated barriers to implementing TUC
in dental settings. A large number of barriers have been
reported. These studies highlight the importance of
further training for dental professionals but also
identify the need for major cultural and policy changes
to facilitate the provision of TUC. Research on barriers
to TUC in dental care could be facilitated by employing
qualitative or mixed methods designs and studies that
evaluate the impact of changing such barriers on TUC
provision. Such an approach will help to close the gap
between research findings and implementation. Regarding
the measurement of outcomes from TUC, no gold standards
exist currently. Therefore both self-reported and
biochemical measures of tobacco use should be reported
in evaluation studies. It is also clear that feedback
from biochemical testing of tobacco use can increase
success rates in tobacco use cessation.
Tobacco Use
Prevention and Cessation in Dental and Dental Hygiene
Undergraduate Education
Ramseier, Christoph A./Christen, Arden/McGowan,
Joan/McCartan, Bernard/Minenna, Luigi/Öhrn,
Kerstin/Walter, Clemens
Oral Health Prev Dent 4 (2006), No 1,
Page 49-60
Oral health care professionals are aware of their
responsibility to advise patients to stop using tobacco.
However, they do not feel sufficiently prepared to help
their patients to quit, and consequently are not
confident in providing these preventive measures. This
fact reflects the lack of emphasis on tobacco cessation
in both dental and dental hygiene undergraduate
education. It may therefore be assumed that improvement
of dental and dental hygiene education in tobacco use
cessation counselling may result in increased
self-confidence and frequency of its provision. The
importance of making space in the curriculum for tobacco
use prevention and cessation has to be emphasised.
Dental schools and dental hygiene programmes have to be
reminded of the key role the dental profession has in
tobacco control. Next to the public health aspect of
tobacco control, such involvement may be both an ethical
and a legal responsibility. The implementation of
effective tobacco use prevention and cessation in a
dental educational setting requires a multidisciplinary
approach involving the school’s entire teaching
personnel and external experts. In general, a knowledge
base attained through lecture, Problem-Based Learning (PBL),
or E-Learning, and clinical skills attained through
clinical instructions and practices is required. It is
suggested that curriculum content should include (1) the
biological effects of tobacco use, (2) the history of
tobacco culture and psychosocial aspects of tobacco use,
(3) prevention and treatment of tobacco use and
dependence, and (4) development of clinical skills for
tobacco use prevention and cessation.
Continuing
Education of Tobacco Use Cessation (TUC) for Dentists
and Dental Hygienists
Wickholm, Seppo/McEwen, Andy/Fried, Jacquelyn/Janda,
Martin/Knevel, Ron/Lädrach, Eva/Persson, Lena
Oral Health Prev Dent 4 (2006), No 1,
Page 61-70
Tobacco use cessation (TUC) guidelines are mostly
designed for undergraduate education. Most practising
dental professionals have not been trained in TUC and so
current and future guidelines need to be adapted for
continuing education. It is important to motivate dental
professionals to be involved in TUC. 'The 3 Ts' is one
suggested method of stimulating this motivation. Two
levels of TUC are recommended, and both brief advice and
enhanced interventions can be incorporated into routine
practice. It is recommended that TUC continuing
education on these interventions should be provided by a
team of dental and trans- disciplinary experts. The
maintenance of TUC involvement can be divided in
individual and collective strategies. The international
dental professional organisations can provide important
'benchmarks' for minimum clinical standards and for the
involvement of both national dental organisations and
individual dental health professionals in TUC continuing
education.
Assessing
Behavioural Change Support Abilities of the Oral
Healthcare Team
Mattheos, Nikos/Attström, Rolf/Fundak, Angela/Knutsson,
Kertin/Padrutt, Susan/Polychronopoulou, Argy/Schoonheim-Klein,
Meta/Saxer, Ulrich Peter
Oral Health Prev Dent 4 (2006), No 1,
Page 71-77
Competent behavioural change intervention can be learned,
practised and developed. Therefore, the teaching and
assessment of this ability should be within the scope of
both the undergraduate and post-graduate curriculum.
Assessment should target knowledge base and skills in
the areas of counselling, communication and behaviour.
Assessment of the knowledge base should ideally be
conducted in a comprehensive, multidisciplinary,
centrally based manner in the preclinical curriculum.
Assessment of skills in the areas of communication,
counselling and behaviour change is a wider aim that
should be integral throughout the curriculum. In
continuing education (CE) environments, an initial 'screening'
assessment would help educators to adjust the course to
the participants’ background and needs. Furthermore,
three major assessment schemes are proposed: (1)
assessment of knowledge and skills, (2) evaluation of
the whole course by the participants, and (3) assessment
of the implementation process, four to six months after
completion. |