Expert Orthodontist, Prof. Ifeoma Utomi, identifies funding as a major drag on efforts to upgrade Nigeria’s level of dental care.

A secondary factor is that most people with dental challenges are not aware that help is available with early detection.

Prof. Utomi, an othodontist, said at an inaugural lecture that early detection and public awareness programmes could help people deal with certain tooth challenges.

She gave the example of malocclusion (misalignment of the teeth) which can be easily corrected if detected early.

“Early treatment will “reduce the demand for comprehensive orthodontic treatment later.”

This is also important, she said, because “there is no commensurate increase in specialist orthodontic manpower.”

Prof. Utomi recommended programmes that create awareness of solutions available for people with maloccusion.

Shortage of manpower and lack of equipment are factors that slow down rate of dealing with the problem.

Consequently, she called for increased funding for dental training and early dental care to manage costs of escalating equipment and training.

Training of dentists in Nigeria is expensive because of high cost of equipment and of grooming of specialists in dental care.

The professor of orthodontics made these recommendations while presenting the 367th inaugural lecture of the University of Lagos.

“The National Health Insurance policy as presently operated is not providing the expected deliverables,” she said.

“There is a need for appropriate policies and legislation for the provision of subsidised care/treatment for those with very severe/handicapping malocclusion, especially those in the lower socio-economic group and those with special needs”.

One of only 70 orthodontists in Nigeria, the specialist in Child Dental Health shared vignettes from her 21 years career as an academic and orthodontist.

She said that expert dental care helps to “restore the smiles and transform the lives” of patients.

“Social psychology has confirmed the importance of facial and dental attractiveness to the socialisation process. They represent important aspects of the quality of life for patients seeking orthodontic treatment.

“Most orthodontic patients are children and adolescents, and it has been shown that children with malocclusion are subjected to teasing and are more likely to be victims of bullying.”

Persons with bad teeth formation suffer low self-esteem and discrimination, the classroom to the workplace.

“In this highly competitive contemporary world, I believe most people would like to look more attractive by restoring their smiles and transforming their lives.”

The title of her paper was “Beauty, Braces and Being: Restoring the Smile, Transforming the Lives”.

“As an Orthodontist, I have seen a lot of children, adolescents and adults who were dissatisfied with the arrangement of their teeth, jaws and overall facial appearance (beauty).

“This dissatisfaction with their beauty negatively impacted their well-being and quality of life. It has caused some to be depressed, experience teasing and bullying and have difficulty socialising with others.

This tends to wipe the smile off their faces. Using orthodontic appliances (braces), the orthodontist restores their smile, beauty, and well-being, transforming their lives into the whole fulfilled essence of existence”.

Prof Utomi disclosed that Nigerians cared so much about the effect of malocclusion on their appearance that most patients who reported for dental care were on self-referral.

A Dental Aesthetic Index Study at the Lagos University Teaching Hospital showed that only 28 per cent of patients had “severe handicapping malocclusion with treatment considered mandatory”.

In comparison, a further 23.3 per cent presented treatment needs the experts considered “elective”.

Children and adolescents form the majority of patients (37.5%) seeking orthodontic care at LUTH.

“Females presented significantly more frequency than males”, she added.

The professor identified seven general factors and 11 local ones that cause malocclusion.

“General factors include heredity, Congenital, Environmental, Metabolic diseases, Dietary problem, Posture, and trauma.

“Local Factors are supernumerary teeth, teeth of abnormal form, missing teeth and premature loss of primary teeth.

“Others are prolonged retention of primary teeth, habits, abnormal labial fraenum, delayed eruption of permanent teeth, impaction, transposition and improper dental restorations.

Utomi is a Fellow of the West African College of Surgeons, a member of the Nigerian Association of Orthodontists, the World Federation of Orthodontists, and the American Association of Orthodontists.

Nigeria’s level of Dental care need funding to improve

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  • Ogbuagu Bob Anikwe, a veteran journalist and message development specialist, is now a community journalism advocate and publisher of Enugu Metro. Contact him on any of the channels below.

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