Daily Dispatch

Gugulethu residents lack insight into role of dentists

- By DAVE CHAMBERS

WHAT are dentists pull out sore teeth.

That was the overwhelmi­ng view of a group of 18 to 35year-olds in Cape Town questioned by academics from Harvard in the US and the University of Cape Town.

They asked the Gugulethu residents about their experience with dentists and found that many of them had never visited one or had any oral health problems addressed.

“Participan­ts’ responses suggested that dental care played little‚ if any‚ role and has thus far had no relevance to their lives‚” the academics wrote in the journal PLOS for? To ONE.

“Almost every participan­t believed that the primary indication for seeking dental care was tooth pain and the only treatment option extraction.”

A team led by Frederick Lambert‚ from Harvard School of Dental Medicine‚ questioned six men and 19 women who were starting anti-retroviral therapy after being diagnosed HIV-positive.

As they were free of symptoms‚ they said the group’s experience­s with oral health care “may be generalisa­ble to the community overall”.

Lambert said the only free dental services available to the 100 000 residents of Gugulethu were at Nyanga clinic‚ but many of the people questioned did not know about them and had no idea what symptoms a dentist treated.

Said Lambert: “Lack of access to high-quality dental care services results in unnecessar­y pain and use of ineffectiv­e treatments. Preventive dental care from public sources appears to be largely unavailabl­e to this high-risk population.”

He said there was a need for education programmes to dispel misconcept­ions and fears about dentists‚ and a campaign to dismantle the barrier between medical and dental services. — DDC

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