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Delivering Alcohol Screening and Brief Interventions in General Dental Practice: Rationale & Overview of the Evidence Andrew McAuley, Christine Goodall,

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Presentation on theme: "Delivering Alcohol Screening and Brief Interventions in General Dental Practice: Rationale & Overview of the Evidence Andrew McAuley, Christine Goodall,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Delivering Alcohol Screening and Brief Interventions in General Dental Practice: Rationale & Overview of the Evidence Andrew McAuley, Christine Goodall, Graham Ogden, Simon Shepherd, Karen Cruikshank

2 Background SIGN74. The management of harmful drinking and alcohol dependence in primary care (2003) “…all healthcare professionals have a role to play in identifying harmful and hazardous drinkers…”

3 So what role for the dentist?

4 Alcohol and Oral Cancer  Alcohol consumption (alongside smoking) increases the risk of developing oral cancer and periodontal disease (Hashibe et al, 2007; Amaral et al, 2008 & 2009)  The incidence of oral cancer in the UK is increasing  Increases significant across younger age-groups and in both sexes (Conway et al, 2006)  Strongly related to social and economic deprivation (Conway et al, 2008)  Linked to the parallel increases in alcohol consumption over the last 50 years   risk for those drinking 20 units per week (Llewelyn & Mitchell, 1994)

5 Oral Cancer: Incidence Source: cancer research UK

6 Alcohol and Oral Health  There are many other clinical reasons that dentists should ask about alcohol: oNon-carious tooth surface loss oMedical problems such as bleeding which may affect treatment oDrug interactions  Oral disease can also be a sign of poorer general health and well-being.

7 Alcohol, violence and facial injury  In the West of Scotland… o73% of facial injuries due to interpersonal violence o82% drinking at the time of injury (Goodall et al, 2008)

8 Policy Context  DoH. Modernising NHS Dentistry – Implementing the NHS Plan (2000)  Scottish Executive. Plan for Action on Alcohol Problems (2002)  HEAT: H4 Alcohol Brief Interventions (2008)  British Dental Association Oral Health Inequalities Policy (2009)

9 The forgotten tribe?  Routine alcohol screening and intervention in GDP is relatively uncommon (Macpherson et al, 2003; Cruz et al, 2005; Miller et al, 2006; Dyer & Robinson, 2006; Shepherd et al, 2011)  We assume doctors, nurses, pharmacists etc will tackle public health issues associated with alcohol and drugs  Dentists often get overlooked  We don’t expect dentists to do this - or do we? oPatients expect dentists to ask them about alcohol and are receptive to advice (Miller et al, 2006; Goodall, 2006 & 2007; Shepherd et al, 2009) oDentists view provision of alcohol advice as relevant to their practice support of relevance (Dyer & Robinson, 2006)  Until Now?...

10 The case for using alcohol screening and brief interventions in GDP…

11 Screening  Detection of alcohol-related problems and treatment is facilitated by use of appropriate screening tools (Raistrick et al, 2006)  No formally recognised screening tool specifically designed for use within general dental practice - AUDIT?... oUsing AUDIT; 31% of dental patients in Scotland drinking at hazardous, harmful or dependent levels (Goodall et al, 2006 & 2007) oUsing AUDIT-C; 25% of patients attending dental practice in USA were drinking at hazardous levels (Miller et al, 2006)

12 Alcohol Brief Interventions (ABIs)  A short, evidence-based, structured conversation about alcohol consumption that seeks in a non-confrontational way to motivate and support an individual to think about and/or plan changes in their drinking behaviour in order to reduce their consumption and/or their risk of harm. (NHS Health Scotland, 2008)

13 ABIs: Evidence  Strong evidence for the effectiveness of ABIs in those drinking at harmful / hazardous levels (Raistrick et al, 2006; SIGN74; NICEPHG24; WHO)  Primary Care, A&E  The evidence for effectiveness in delivery of ABIs in GDP has yet to be established but…  Identified as a potential setting where they can be effective (Cruz et al, 2005; Goodall, 2006 & 2007; Dyer et al, 2006; Shepherd et al, 2009; NICEPHG24, 2010)

14 ABI in GDP: Plausible Theory?  Potential to improve oral and general health  Equitable  Sustainable  Potential to reduce health inequalities:  65% of adults in Scotland are currently registered with a dentist (ISD, 2010)  80% of adults have had access to NHS general dental services over a six-year period (Tilley & Chalkley, 2005)

15 GDP Health Improvement  Increasing role and willingness to develop skills & participation further (Dyer & Robinson, 2006; McCann et al, 2000)  ~ 90% of Scottish dentists having already expanded their remit to include advice to patients on smoking cessation (Chestnutt & Binnie, 1995)   50% seeing a specific role for dentists in counselling patients to stop (Chestnutt & Binnie, 1995)  Patients also consider smoking cessation as part of the GDP role (Campbell et al, 1999)

16 Barriers  Time “….if I had lots of time with a patient I think it would be a nice thing to do…I’m much more interested in the bigger picture of their whole health”  Funding “..if I was getting paid to do it I might do it…(alcohol screening)”  Training “ we have never been educated about how to help someone.. Where do you start if you’ve actually no experience..”  Confidence “ there’s a fine line…between trying to be helpful to someone and give them advice and being patronising..” (Goodall, 2006 & 2007) (Warnakulasuriya & Johnson, 1990; Macpherson et al, 2003; Cruz et al, 2005; Shepherd et al, 2009 & 2010 & 2011)

17 Facilitators  Patients are receptive to alcohol advice (Miller et al, 2006; Shepherd et al, 2009; Goodall, 2006 & 2007)  Patients were not offended by alcohol screening (Goodall, 2006 & 2007) oMost felt it was important for the dentist to ask about alcohol (62.9%) oMost thought it was relevant to their oral health (83.1%) and were happy to discuss it (74.2%)  Frequency & length of dental appts (Cruz et al, 2005)

18 Future?  Alcohol training for dentists? oEmbed within the undergraduate curriculum oProvide PG education oTrain  Utilise Professionals Complimentary to Dentistry (PCDs)?  Payment for an alcohol service in GDP? oOral Heath Assessment Review (OHAR)?

19 Conclusions  Alcohol is a key risk factor for oral cancer  Alcohol is associated with a range of other adverse oral health outcomes  GDPs are attended by the majority of the adult population over time  ~ 30% of GDP Patients drinking at Harmful and Hazardous levels.  Increasing role of dentists in health improvement  Patients receptive to screening and intervention  Policy drivers in place  Oral Health Assessment Review – a window of opportunity?

20 Any questions? Andrew McAuley Public Health Adviser (Substance Misuse / Alcohol) NHS Health Scotland Public Health Science, EfA Team Elphinstone House 65 West Regent Street Glasgow, G2 2AF Tel: 0141 354 2935 (ext: 2935) Fax: 0141 354 2901 andrew.mcauley@nhs.net www.healthscotland.com McAuley, A., Goodall, CA., Ogden, GR., Shepherd, S., & Cruikshank, K. 2011. Delivering alcohol screening and alcohol brief interventions within general dental practice: Rationale and overview of the evidence. Br Dent J, 210: E15.


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