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Tuesday, 9th February 2010

Dental action targets children

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Published Date: 14 October 2008
A NEW strategy with the focus of preventing dental problems among children is be introduced in Sheffield.
Dentists in the city, who are currently paid according to how much treatment they carry out, will be asked to sign a new contract that will encourage them to carry out more preventive work.

The changes are part of NHS Sheffield's Dental Health Com
missioning Strategy, which outlines how services should be run up to 2011.

Key changes will come into force in March next year, when the current three-year dental contract comes to end.

The director of dental public health for Sheffield, John Green, said the current dental contract was very "activity focused."

He said: "It focuses on treatment, which can be a bit of a problem, so at the end of the three years there is an opportunity to revisit it all and focus on other things, such as prevention, to try and stop teeth going bad in the first place.

"There would still be recognition for carrying out treatment such as extractions and fillings, but dentists would also get rewarded for preventive work.

"This would not only be good for dentists, but good for patients."

Statistics reveal that, while the condition of children's teeth in Sheffield is slightly worse than the national average, children in deprived areas suffer almost five times the number of decayed, missing and filled teeth than those in more affluent neighbourhoods.

The figures, which relate to the year 2005-6, show that five-year-old children in Sheffield as a whole have an average of 1.72 decayed, missing or filled teeth, slightly above the national average of 1.47. However, this increases to 4.21 in the city's more deprived neighbourhoods.

Preventive work will therefore focus on those areas where children are more likely to develop dental problems, such as Burngreave, Darnall, Manor Castle, Gleadless Valley, Shiregreen, Brightside and Firth Park.

This will include increasing access to dental care, improving children's diet and targeting oral health promotion at young children.

At present, fluoride is added to children's milk in 42 primary schools in the city. This will continue, and the local NHS is also planning to begin talks on the possibility of adding fluoride to water.

New Oral Health Action Teams will be set up in certain neighbourhoods, to give out free toothpaste packs, introduce teeth brushing in before and after-school clubs and also offer support to health, social and education professionals working in these areas.

These teams will initially be piloted and evaluated in Lowedges, Batemoor, Jordanthorpe, Tinsley, Darnall and Acres Hill.

Mr Green added: "This financial year we're hoping to improve access to dental services.

"Sheffield is pretty good anyway – we're in the top 10 in the country for the number of people who get to see a dentist – but we need to be better.

"We're hoping people who need to see a dentist will get a better service.

"The patients who need preventative help, who have a high risk of disease, are also going to get more help.

"We hope to lift the standard of care to a very high standard right across the board."



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  • Last Updated: 14 October 2008 10:04 AM
  • Source: n/a
  • Location: Yorkshire
 
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Andrew Johnson,

Derbyshire UK 23/10/2008 23:02:39
Please google "The Fluoride Deception" and watch the video.

I used to think Fluoride was a good option - now I know it is not. A shame to force unneccesary additives which will be harmful to children's growth. Fluoride is not required by the body - it is a toxin, so why add it to food?
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Angry at this story,

Essex 27/10/2008 22:22:14
WHAT? .. is this the same fluoride that has a warning about swallowing on your toothpaste? the same fluoride that the NAZI`s forced the JEWS to consume in the DEATH CAMPS?
WAKE UP PEOPLE.. the government are poisoning our children!!!!!
REFUSE THIS POISON MILK NOW!!!!
the internet is there for a reason!!! seek and search the TRUTH about fluoride NOW!!!
3

BSdetector,

Perth Australia 28/10/2008 03:52:59
I can't believe how insane this is. Andrew Johnson is correct. Fluoride is a neurotoxin. It is insanity to destroy the health of children. Wake up people.
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enki,

uk 24/11/2008 23:56:39
This is deeply concerning. Fluoridating our water supplies does nothing for our teeth but does do something quite profound to our brains... The pituitary gland in the centre of our brain on autopsy was found to be caked in the chemical waste commonly called Fluoride... make no mistakes this is not an organic Fluoride but a toxic by-product waste from the aluminium industry – its expensive to dispose of the simplest way is in our municipal water supplies. This chemical compound was used in concentration camps in the 2nd world war and found to make prisoners dumb by making them more passive. If this was my child in one of these 42 schools I would move well out of the area. Any council who takes part in such chemical experiments without allowing the parents to have a say must be looked at with much concern. Who has your children’s best interests to heart? Look at the research... look into chemistry... have the research papers in front of you... look at the evidence for Fluoridating our water and note there is absolutely nothing anywhere in any other country which shows that this chemical contaminant works or helps your child’s teeth... you love your children and have their interests at heart not some bureaucrats who nods to the powers above. Knowledge is power but it’s up to us to know and not to rely on others.
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