Abstract

Dental caries are the most common chronic disease of childhood. Untreated caries can result in severe pain and infection; and in some cases, difficulties in eating, speech, and education. Hospitalization and general anesthesia are often necessary for treating extensive disease in young children, which adds significant risk and expense. Interventions, such as community-based preventative care, utilization of pre-authorizations for treatment, and at-risk contracts, have been deployed as innovative strategies to reduce the incidence of caries and the cost of treatment. Value-based payment structures give payors flexibility to design a multipronged system to impact the health of consumers. This practice brief will identify interventions at a systems level that reduced the utilization of general anesthesia treating dental caries in children under the age of six. Dental claims data from the period of Q1 2011 to Q2 2020 were utilized to analyze the trends in utilization of the operating room (OR) to treat dental conditions among children under 6 years. Fixed effects analysis was utilized to identify key over time changes in the reduction of children's OR utilization. A reduction in utilization of general anesthesia and hospitalization for treating dental caries in young children was seen. The expansion of the community care team, metrics to reinforce the systems of provider education and training, and the use of incentive payments were all associated with reductions in the rate of OR utilization. Between 2012 and 2017, multiple initiatives were implemented without a systematic approach to quality improvement to evaluate.

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