Abstract
Background and aim Unscheduled dental attendances (UDA) and the associated morbidity can cause individual distress, disrupt military effectiveness and have broader societal impacts. Preventing future dental morbidity is an essential component of dentistry. This, the largest study of its type, aimed to examine the relationship between clinical and demographic variables and UDA, and to quantify how well military dental risk categorisation predicts subsequent UDA events.
Methods This is a retrospective cohort analysis of a clinical dataset containing 175,558 service personnel over an 11-month period. Statistical methods examined: sensitivity and specificity of the existing NATO 'Dental fitness classification system' (NATO Cat) in predicting UDA, relative risk (RR) of UDA by selected variables, Kaplan-Meier failure analysis and multivariate analysis.
Results A total of 16,722 UDA events were recorded, the majority (66.7%) were due to caries, periapical pathology and fractured teeth or restorations, or a combination thereof. NATO Cat yielded poor predictive sensitivity (sensitivity 10%, specificity 93%). NATO Cat 3 (RR 1.47), age group (RR 1.06-2.05), gender (RR 1.46) and DMFT category (RR 1.09-3.05), were all significantly associated with increased UDA. The RR of UDA increased by 5% (RR 1.05) for each additional DMFT increment in a logistic regression model.
Conclusions After adjusting for confounding variables, DMFT was significantly associated with UDA events. This study indicates that, even when treatment need has been met, a residual risk remains that is directly related to exposure to dental disease and operative dentistry. Strategies which prevent downstream operative treatment need and increases in DMFT may also reduce future UDA. UDA may be a useful quality outcome indicator for the success of NHS dental services in securing oral health.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
Simecek J W. Dental classification and risk assessment prevention of dental morbidity in deployed military personnel. Consensus statements. Mil Med 2008; 173 (Spec Iss): 59.
Department of Health. Implementing local commissioning for primary care dentistry: Factsheet 7. 2005. Available at https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20071204133047/http://www.dh.gov.uk/en/Publicationsandstatistics/Publications/PublicationsPolicyAndGuidance/DH_4124337(accessed March 2019).
Lloyd S J. Dental morbidity of home-based armed forces personnel - a service-wide audit. 2012.
Gunepin M, Derache F, Blatteau J E, Bombert C, Simecek J. Medical evacuation of French forces for dental emergencies: Operation Serval. Mil Med 2015; 180: 578-581.
DDS. Dental Morbidity Reporting Op HERRICK. 2013. (Internal publication).
Davies T J, McCormick R J. The importance of, and the benefits derived from, forward dental peripatetic clinics in Afghanistan. Br Dent J 2015; 218: 303-306.
NHS Digital. Adult Dental Health Survey 2009 - Summary report and thematic series. 2011. Available at http://digital.nhs.uk/catalogue/PUB01086 (accessed March 2019).
NATO. AMedP4.4 Dental Fitness Standards for Military Personnel and the NATO Dental Fitness Classification System. 2014.
Richardson P S. Dental morbidity in United Kingdom Armed Forces, Iraq 2003. Mil Med 2005; 170: 536-541.
Mahoney G. The Australian experience in dental classification.Mil Med 2008; 173 (Spec Iss): 15-17.
Simecek J W, McGinley J L, Levine M E, Diefenderfer K E, Ahlf R L. A statistical method to evaluate dental classification systems used by military dental services.Mil Med 2008; 173(Spec Iss): 51-55.
Richardson P S. Dental risk assessment for military personnel. Mil Med 2005; 170: 542-545.
Simecek J W, Diefenderfer K E. An evaluation of U S. Navy Dental Corps classification guidelines. Mil Med 2010; 175: 895-900.
Mahoney G, Slade G, Kitchener S. The true prevalence of unscheduled dental visits in the Australian Defence Force. J Mil Veterans Health 2010; 18: 5-11.
Moss D L. Dental emergencies during SFOR 8 in Bosnia. Mil Med 2002; 167: 904-906.
Mahoney G. Predicting unscheduled dental visits by members of the Australian dental force. Brisbane: University of Queensland, 2010. PhD Thesis.
University of California Berkeley. Statistics for Bioinformatics. Course Notes Stat C141/ Bioeng C14. 2008. Available at https://www.stat.berkeley.edu/~mgoldman/Section0402.pdf (accessed March 2019).
Elmer T B, Langford J, McCormick R, Morris A J. Is there a differential in the dental health of new recruits to the British Armed Forces? A pilot study. Br Dent J 2011; 211: E18.
Chisick M C, King J E. Dental epidemiology of military operations.Mil Med 1993; 158: 581-585.
Elderton R J. Preventive (evidence-based) approach to quality general dental care. Med Princ Pract 2003; 12 (Spec Iss): 12-21.
Downer M C, Azli N A, Bedi R, Moles D R, Setchell D J. How long do routine dental restorations last? A systematic review. Br Dent J 1999; 187: 432-439.
Burke F J T, Lucarotti P S K. The ultimate guide to restoration longevity in England and Wales. Part 2: Amalgam restorations - time to next intervention and to extraction of the restored tooth.Br Dent J 2018; 224: 789-800.
Department of Health and Social Care. Dental contract reform: prototypes scheme. 2018. Available at https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/dental-contract-reform-prototypes(accessed March 2019).
Department of Health and Social Care. Dental Quality and Outcomes Framework (DQOF): 2016 to 2017. 2016. Available at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/dental-quality-and-outcomes-framework(accessed March 2019).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Dermont, M., Elmer, T. & McCormick, R. A bridge too far? The relationship between interventive operative dentistry and future dental morbidity. Br Dent J 226, 498–502 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41415-019-0147-4
Published:
Version of record:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41415-019-0147-4
This article is cited by
-
Factually untrue
British Dental Journal (2022)
-
Does prevention-focused dental care provision during recruit training reduce adverse dental outcomes in UK Armed Forces personnel? A retrospective cohort analysis
British Dental Journal (2021)
-
Defence dentistry: an occupationally focused health service with worldwide deployable capability
British Dental Journal (2021)

