Abstract

Introduction The number of children undergoing dental extractions under general anaesthetic (GA) remains high. The newly published Royal College of Surgeons guidelines in 2023 take a less prescriptive approach on balancing and compensating extractions for first permanent molars. In an effort to maintain an effective and efficient patient care pathway, an orthodontic remote assessment triage model was developed in West Dorset for the special care dentistry and community dental service.Aims The orthodontic triage form is now used across Dorset. This service evaluation assesses whether the form is still effective despite the upscaling. Furthermore, qualitative feedback was obtained from the clinicians involved in referring and triaging.Design The sample of 352 forms consisted of children aged 16 years or younger undergoing GA for dental extractions for whom orthodontic triage had been requested between March 2019 and March 2023. The clinician feedback was collected using a questionnaire.Results This service evaluation found that 53.1% of patients had their treatment plan modified following an orthodontic assessment. Positive feedback from all clinicians involved suggests there is potential to expand this model to other services.Discussion Involving the orthodontist can address orthodontic concerns which has the potential to simplify or obviate the need for future orthodontic treatment. Remote assessment reduces the need for face-to-face appointments. The clinician perspective influences willingness to further develop and expand the current pathway.Conclusion Remote triage has proved successful in Dorset. There is potential to build an initiative between primary and secondary care in the hopes of creating a universal national proforma to increase access to orthodontic opinions for children requiring dental extractions.

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