Barriers and Facilitators to Promoting Oral Health Literacy and Patient Communication among Dental Providers in California
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Personal health literacy is the degree to which individuals have the ability to find, understand, and use information and services to inform health-related decisions and actions for themselves and others.
- Organizational health literacy is the degree to which organizations equitably enable individuals to find, understand, and use information and services to inform health-related decisions and actions for themselves and others.
2. Methods
3. Results
3.1. Summary of KI Characteristics
3.2. Provider Knowledge and Use of OHL Educational and Communication Techniques
“In hygiene school, it’s one of the many things we do, oral health education (…) I increase my own oral health literacy as new (OHL) studies come out on my own. As a public health professional, oral health is important to me. Even looking at (…) how it affects populations, to me it’s health equity. It’s imperative for all of us to understand this.”(Dental Hygienist, Public Practice)
“You talk to the patient and educate them and trying to understand why they need to do certain things (…) Try to use the outcomes to motivate them, to change behavior. (…) Motivational interview takes a lot of time. Not everyone can do it. We have a lot of patients. Need to carve out 5–10 min (for patient communication) is all we can do.”(Dentist, Public Practice)
3.3. Provider/Patient Communication Barriers
3.3.1. Patient/Caregiver-Side Communication Barriers
3.3.2. Provider-Side Communication Barriers
“(The) most obvious barrier is language (…) Time is also the issue. Even if you can delegate, it’s a system issue, if you delegate to dental staff to do the education, it’s taking up chair time/office space (…) Also, many providers have limited training on health communication techniques.”(Dentist, Public Practice)
“I would like to have more time and more patient cooperation to learn. (We also) need more (patient education) resources that explain oral health and dental procedures in simple terms and that have a positive tone.”(Dental Assistant, Private Practice)
3.4. Communication Facilitators for Dental Providers
“My dream would be to have California take the lead on a more innovative Medi-Cal (Medicaid—a healthcare program for people with low-incomes) Dental, create more (financial) incentives for positive oral health outcomes. Right now, it is geared to treating disease and procedures. Need to flip to outcomes based—use (performance-based) incentives for patients and providers to become healthier—achieve scalable results.”(Dentist, Public Practice)
“We need to make top-down changes, starting the changes with accrediting bodies for medical/dental education, (…) board exams, (…) license recertification, and clinical quality measures and financial incentives to include good health literacy and oral health literacy practices. There are some individual medical/dental schools and scattered continuing education courses that may include health literacy/oral health literacy, but that only reaches a small subset of medical/dental providers, particularly those who are already aware of the issues. To draw in new participants, it’s helpful to tag on oral health literacy to other conferences (e.g., general pediatrics) and present compelling cases to show how oral health is critical to overall health.”(OHL expert)
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Descriptive Characteristic | All Providers |
---|---|
n (%) | |
Gender | |
Male | 12 (30%) |
Female | 28 (70%) |
Race/Ethnicity * | |
White | 24 (60%) |
Asian/Pacific Islander | 11 (25%) |
Hispanic/Latino | 4 (10%) |
Black/African American | 1 (3%) |
Other | 2 (5%) |
Years in the field | |
Average years in field (range) | 22 (1.5–49) |
Current practice type * | |
Private practice | 25 (63%) |
Public practice/FQHC | 15 (37%) |
Rating of HL and communication training | |
Very good | 13 (33%) |
Good | 21 (53%) |
Poor | 4 (10%) |
Very poor | 1 (3%) |
Not sure | 1 (3%) |
Ever taken a communication course outside of professional training | |
Yes | 26 (65%) |
No | 14 (35%) |
Interested in attending CE on communication strategies | |
Yes | 28 (70%) |
Maybe | 10 (25%) |
No | 2 (5%) |
Ever assessed practice for patient friendliness | |
Yes | 20 (50%) |
No | 15 (38%) |
Unknown | 5 (13%) |
Communication Technique | Knew of It and Used It in Practice (%) | Knew of It and Did Not Use It (%) | Did Not Know of It (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Caries risk assessment (CAMBRA) | 26 (59%) | 12 (27%) | 6 (14%) |
Anticipatory guidance | 19 (43%) | 2 (5%) | 23 (52%) |
Family oral health education (FOHE) | 13 (30%) | 2 (5%) | 29 (66%) |
Motivational interviewing | 15 (34%) | 6 (14%) | 23 (52%) |
Teach-back | 14 (32%) | 6 (14%) | 24 (55%) |
Communication Measure | All Providers n (%) |
---|---|
Greatest challenges in communicating with patients/caregivers (P/C) * | |
Patient/caregiver-side challenges | |
P/C does not follow instructions, regardless of how well explained | 22 (56%) |
Cultural beliefs are a barrier to patient/caregiver understanding | 20 (51%) |
Language is a barrier to patient/caregiver understanding | 16 (41%) |
P/C is not that interested in OH education | 15 (38%) |
P/C does not understand OH information | 14 (36%) |
P/C is afraid of the dentist/oral health provider | 13 (33%) |
P/C has trouble communicating due to treatment in mouth/oral cavity | 5 (13%) |
Provider-side challenges | |
Other staff, no background in communication techniques | 14 (36%) |
Not enough time | 10 (26%) |
Not enough background in communication techniques | 4 (10%) |
Does not have simple educational resources to give patients/caregivers | 4 (10%) |
Other | 9 (23%) |
Communication Measure | Providers Reporting That They Need Help Communicating n(%) |
---|---|
Need help communicating with patients | |
Yes | 27 (69%) |
No | 12 (31%) |
Patient groups providers need help communicating with: | |
Persons with limited English proficiency | 17 (65%) |
Persons with cognitive disabilities | 14 (54%) |
Elderly patients | 11 (42%) |
Those with low levels of education | 9 (35%) |
Deaf or hard of hearing individuals | 8 (31%) |
Children under age 5 | 8 (31%) |
Other | 6 (23%) |
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Tseng, W.; Pleasants, E.; Ivey, S.L.; Sokal-Gutierrez, K.; Kumar, J.; Hoeft, K.S.; Horowitz, A.M.; Ramos-Gomez, F.; Sodhi, M.; Liu, J.; et al. Barriers and Facilitators to Promoting Oral Health Literacy and Patient Communication among Dental Providers in California. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 216. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18010216
Tseng W, Pleasants E, Ivey SL, Sokal-Gutierrez K, Kumar J, Hoeft KS, Horowitz AM, Ramos-Gomez F, Sodhi M, Liu J, et al. Barriers and Facilitators to Promoting Oral Health Literacy and Patient Communication among Dental Providers in California. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(1):216. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18010216
Chicago/Turabian StyleTseng, Winston, Elizabeth Pleasants, Susan L. Ivey, Karen Sokal-Gutierrez, Jayanth Kumar, Kristin S. Hoeft, Alice M. Horowitz, Francisco Ramos-Gomez, Miku Sodhi, Jessica Liu, and et al. 2021. "Barriers and Facilitators to Promoting Oral Health Literacy and Patient Communication among Dental Providers in California" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 1: 216. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18010216
APA StyleTseng, W., Pleasants, E., Ivey, S. L., Sokal-Gutierrez, K., Kumar, J., Hoeft, K. S., Horowitz, A. M., Ramos-Gomez, F., Sodhi, M., Liu, J., & Neuhauser, L. (2021). Barriers and Facilitators to Promoting Oral Health Literacy and Patient Communication among Dental Providers in California. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(1), 216. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18010216