The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Inmates brushing up on their health thanks to dental advice

- Caroline lindsay clindsay@thecourier.co.uk www.dentistry.dundee.ac.uk

Good teeth are leading to better lives for jail inmates, a new health programme has found.

Dentists from Dundee University have been advising men at Perth Prison about their teeth and finding it has helped them in other ways too.

The programme, People in Prison, Health Coaching for Scotland, included supervisio­n and training sessions on the importance of oral hygiene.

Professor Ruth Freeman, co-director of the Dundee Health Services Research Unit, explains: “We know from public health research that when you start caring for your teeth, you start caring for your whole self.

“Oral health is so important because it is linked with quality of life.

“For example, advising people to stop smoking then reduces the risk of oral cancer and periodonta­l disease and bronchitis and lung cancer.

“Similarly with diet – links between sugar and dental decay and being overweight means reducing sugar in the diet will stop tooth decay, reduce weight and hence, coronary heart disease, diabetes and so on.”

Many of those taking part said they intended to use their new skills to help others avoid criminal lifestyles when they are released.

One participan­t, who had smoked since he was a young teenager, says: “I stopped smoking because I coached myself and I wouldn’t have been able to do that if I hadn’t joined in the programme.”

Another notes: “The training helped me realise that I can help people to change – and I enjoy doing that. ”

Pete White, chief executive of charity Positive Prison? Positive Futures, believes the benefits of the programme pioneered in Perth Prison will be lifechangi­ng for all of those who took part.

“Given that the majority of people living in prisons in Scotland come from impoverish­ed and marginalis­ed background­s, it will have a massive and long-lasting impact,” he says.

Oral health is linked with your quality of life

 ?? Picture: Dundee University. ?? Professor Ruth Freeman (far right) with health educators and course participan­ts from Perth Prison.
Picture: Dundee University. Professor Ruth Freeman (far right) with health educators and course participan­ts from Perth Prison.

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