The Dental Health Aide Therapist program is now a fixture of oral care in much of rural Alaska, including Bristol Bay. A new study conducted in the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta suggests that the program is improving dental health.
Rural Health Aides have a long, successful history of improving access to health care in Alaska. Now, dental a program based on that model is improving oral care in the YK Delta. The Dental Health Aide Therapist program was controversial when it started a decade ago, but a new study suggests that smiles have gotten healthier, cleaner, and toothier in villages where it’s appeared.
Phylicia Wilde grew up in Mountain Village on the Yukon River. When she was 12, she got a toothache. It started small, but soon she couldn’t sleep. With the pain, she began missing school. Then, a dentist arrived for the village’s yearly dental visit.
“And I was entered into that list to get seen," said Wilde, "but the list was so long. It was four or five pages of patients.”
Wilde didn’t make the cut and had to fly to Bethel for treatment. By then, the tooth had abscessed, or become infected.
“And it was on a permanent tooth that had a huge cavity, and I needed a root canal.”
If Wilde had had a dental provider in her village, she says that the problem may never have occurred. Now, Wilde herself is a provider. She works as a certified Dental Health Aide Therapist for the Yukon Kuskokwim Health Corporation. After training for two years, she offers many of the same services that dentists do like x-rays, fillings, and extractions.
This program was started by the state's tribal health organizations because nothing else was working. Dentists were willing to travel to rural areas and donate services, but it was never enough.
National dental groups sued to stop the program, saying that it wouldn't be safe. They lost, and the program began turning out trained health aides capable of doing dental therapy.
“Dental therapists seem to be making a difference in terms of providing the type of care that you and I would want for ourselves and maybe family members," said Dr. Donald Chi, an Associate Professor of Dentistry at University of Washington and a pediatric dentist who’s practiced in the YK Delta.
Recently, he published a study evaluating the impact of dental therapists on Delta communities. The findings are significant.
The study is the first long term review of health impacts by dental therapists, and Chi says that the results could change the way dental care is provided in rural areas across the U.S.“The more number of dental therapist treatment days communities got," said Chi, "the more preventive care people got, and fewer people were getting extractions.”
Dentist Dr. Judith Burks coordinates YKHC’s 10 dental therapists. She's seen the transformation.
“I go out to villages and instead of the main focus being on emergencies," said Burks "we get to focus on things like prevention and higher level care for the patients.”
In other words, dental therapists can now educate communities on how to live healthier lifestyles for a healthier mouth, like not using tobacco and avoiding sugar.
Dental therapist Phylicia Wilde knows her efforts mean that villagers are having fewer of the painful, sleepless nights and missed school days like she experienced growing up.
“It’s been awesome, just seeing the patients and their gratitude. That feeling is just amazing,” said Wilde.
YKHC hopes to nearly double the number of dental therapists serving the region over the next two years. They’re offering full scholarships, and applications will be available on the YKHC website in February.