Comprehensive Dental Care
Mostrando 13-18 de 18 artigos, teses e dissertações.
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13. Reviewed evidence about the safety of the daily use of alcohol-based mouthrinses
Current scientific knowledge provides clear evidence that alcohol-based mouthwashes can be beneficial in a daily oral health routine, including dental hygiene and plaque control. Several issues are worth discussing, in spite of the wealth of supporting evidence. Despite some undesirable effects to some people, like burning sensation, and some contraindicatio
Brazilian Oral Research. Publicado em: 2008-08
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14. Dental caries, human development and odontological services in the State of Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2000-2006. / Cárie dentária, desenvolvimento humano e serviços odontológicos no estado de São Paulo, Brasil, 2000-2006
The State of Sao Paulo has a high concentration of dental surgeons, but the social and financial inequality presented there and the difference in the distribution of professionals throughout the region do not collaborate for equity in the offering and access to the odontological services in Primary Health Care. The aim of this ecological study was to describ
Publicado em: 2008
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15. Os Centros de Especialidades Odontológicas como suporte da atenção básica: uma avaliação na perspectiva da integralidade
The public dental services in Brazil were limited, practically, to the basic care, so that the specialized services acted, up to 2002, no more than 3,5% of the total of clinical procedures. That lower offer reveals the difficulty of continuity of the attention, that is, the comprehensiveness in the assistance, particulary, the reference and counter-reference
Publicado em: 2007
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16. Current trends in dental care delivery systems: comprehensive health services for children and youth.
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17. ElderSmile: A Comprehensive Approach to Improving Oral Health for Seniors
Societal changes, including the aging of the US population and the lack of routine dental service coverage under Medicare, have left many seniors unable to afford any dental care whatsoever, let alone the most advanced treatments.1 In 2004, the Columbia University College of Dental Medicine and its partners instituted the ElderSmile program in the largely im
American Public Health Association.
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18. Costs of providing dental services for children in public and private practices.
This study compares the costs of providing children's dental services in three practice settings: private practices, public mobile clinics, and public fixed clinics. Some 15,000 children were provided comprehensive dental care over a three-year period. Results indicate that costs per visit and per child were lowest in mobile clinics and highest in private pr