Relative needs index study
Relative needs index study,
South Australia and New South Wales
Summary
The Relative Needs Index (RNI) Study applied indicators of patient-perceived
treatment needs (i.e. symptom-based measures of disease, and social and psychological
consequences of oral diseases and disorders) and compared them to a clinical
judgment of urgency of care. The RNI study sought to determine the relative need of
patients attending for emergency and general dental care by assessing both
patient-perceived need and a clinical determination of need stratified into a hierarchy
of urgency of care.
At present there are no criteria or protocols in place that can be used to check or assess
the reasonableness of a patient’s presentation for emergency dental care or even the
relative need or priority of patients on the waiting list for general dental care.
Currently, waiting lists for general dental care are based on a chronological queuing of
patients, meaning that general dental care is offered on a ‘first come, first served’ basis
to potential patients in the order they entered the waiting list. However, is this the
most egalitarian approach to rationing dental care?
It may seem equitable to take the approach of ‘those who make the first claim to
wanting to receive dental care by joining a waiting list should also be the first to
receive the care’. However, there are clear disadvantages involved in the use of this
system. It does not take into consideration a patient’s need for care or the urgency with
which the care is required.
One way of circumventing the problems associated with allocating dental care to
patients on the basis of waiting time is to ration the care on the basis of their overall
experience of oral diseases and disorders. Patients would be given priority on the
waiting list depending on their reported symptoms and/or the psychosocial impact of
their oral problem. Systems that give priority to patients with the greatest need first are
deemed to be equitable, and should facilitate better access to adult dental care in both
South Australia (SA) and New South Wales (NSW).
The data in the report derives from individual client experience of the problem
presented to clinic, and is cross-matched with data provided by the assessing dentists.
If client perception and dentist perception are assumed to express the pragmatic
experience of access to care, the results suggest that some triaging of emergency and
general patients using questions similar to the ones asked in the questionnaire may not
be seen as unreasonable by both clients and service providers.
A total of 839 (91.2% of the anticipated sample) and 740 (82.2% of the anticipated
sample) eligible patients requesting emergency dental care and general dental care
were recruited across South Australia (SA) and New South Wales (NSW) respectively.
Subjective oral health status indicators (i.e. experience of pain or other oral symptoms)
and the psychosocial impact of oral disorders were examined as potential predictors of
urgency of care.
Psychosocial impact was assessed by asking patients if, during the last week for
emergency patients or the last four weeks for general patients, they had experienced
specific events because of problems with their teeth, mouth or dentures. The study
Relative needs index study, South Australia and New South Wales vii
included social impact questions on toothache and other oral and facial pain, being
concerned/worried about one’s dental health or appearance, avoidance of going out,
ability to carry out daily activities and dental anxiety.
For the emergency sample, just over 71% of patients reported having a toothache in the
last week, almost 70% indicated that they were worried about the appearance of their
teeth or mouth, approximately 31% stayed home more than usual and 26.5% reported
avoiding their usual leisure activities because of problems with their teeth, mouth or
dentures. Variables having a statistically significant association with urgency of care
included age, education, experience of toothache, pain in teeth with hot or cold
food/fluids, pain in jaw while opening mouth wide, sore gums, bleeding gums, pain at
night, difficulty sleeping, staying home more than usual, avoiding usual leisure
activities and worry/concern about the health of one’s teeth or mouth.
For those patients seeking general dental care, almost 45% reported having a toothache
in the last four weeks, 41% of the sample indicated that they were prevented from
eating foods they would like to eat, just over 49% felt uncomfortable eating any foods,
almost 70% indicated that they were worried about the appearance of their teeth or
mouth, approximately 44% reported being embarrassed by the appearance/health of
their teeth or mouth and just over 27% felt that life in general was less satisfying.
Variables having a statistically significant association with urgency of care included
age, usual/previous occupation, experience of toothache and various other oral and
facial pain symptoms, being prevented from eating certain foods, decreased enjoyment
of food and being worried/concerned or embarrassed about the appearance and health
of one’s teeth or mouth.
Logistic regression was used to further examine the significant bivariate associations
for each sample, and models were developed to aid in the prediction of urgency of
care. Since the experience of symptoms reported by patients in each sample is
somewhat different, the perceived treatment needs of emergency and general patients
will also be different. These differences are accounted for by using separate models to
predict urgency of care for each sample.
L Luzzi
Research Fellow
Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health
The University of Adelaide
AJ Spencer
Professor of Social and Preventive Dentistry
School of Dentistry, The University of Adelaide
KF Roberts-Thomson
Senior Research Fellow
Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health
The University of Adelaide
K Jones
Research Associate
Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health
The University of Adelaide
ISSN 1321-0254
ISBN 978 1 74024 885 3
AIHW Cat. No. DEN 194
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