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LATEST NEWS UPDATES | Oral health given short shrift: study

Oral health given short shrift: study

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published Published on Jul 19, 2019   modified Modified on Jul 19, 2019
-The Hindu

Situation is the most bleak in low-income countries, says Lancet report

“Oral diseases present a major global public health burden, affecting 3.5 billion people worldwide, yet oral health has been largely ignored by the global health community,” noted a new Lancet Series on Oral Health.

The report warns that with a treat-over-prevent model, modern dentistry has failed to combat the global challenge of oral diseases, giving rise to calls for the radical reform of dental care.

“The burden of oral diseases is on course to rise as more people are exposed to the underlying risk factors of oral diseases, including sugar, tobacco and alcohol and emerging evidence of the food, beverage, and sugar industry’s influence on dental research and professional bodies raises fresh concern,” noted the release.

Stating that oral health has been isolated from traditional healthcare and health policy for too long despite the major global public health burden of oral diseases, the paper published in The Lancet states that failure of the global health community to prioritise the global burden of oral health has led to calls for the radical reform of dental care, tightened regulation of the sugar industry, and greater transparency around conflict of interests in dental research.

Oral diseases, including tooth decay, gum disease and oral cancers, affect almost half of the global population, with untreated dental decay the most common health condition worldwide. In India, oral disorders are the most prevalent disease condition, and have remained so for the past 30 years.

Prevalence of oral cancer is highest in South Asian countries.

Please click here to read more.

The Hindu, 19 July, 2019, https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/oral-health-given-short-shrift-study/article28563498.ece?homepage=true


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