Teledentistry trialled in New Zealand’s Northland DHB

The service is targeting children and adolescents initially but will expand to adult services in time.
By Rebecca McBeth
02:48 AM

Image: Dental/Oral Health Therapist Kirstie Culpan using an intraoral camera so Dentist Ellen Clark (pictured on the monitor) can view and examine a patient's teeth. Credit: Northland DHB

New Zealand’s Northland District Health Board (DHB) is trialling an oral telehealth service for children and adolescents with plans to expand it to adult services over time.

The DHB is piloting the use of Zoom video conferencing technology and a specialised intraoral camera to allow dentists at Whangarei Hospital to do examinations and consultations on children at remote locations.

The first trial involved an oral health therapist operating the camera at Kaitaia District Hospital. The therapist sees the images live so is able to adjust the camera as needed and on instructions from the dentist.

Previously, the dentist would have travelled to Kaitaia and seen the patients in person.

Oral health therapist Kirstie Culpan says that by having teledentists, children can have their consults on time. If needed, they can also be placed on the general anaesthetic waitlist as soon as possible.

Northland DHB telehealth and mobility programme manager Roy Davidson said, “The live clinical quality imaging provided by the specialised intraoral camera is the key technical component that makes these clinics possible.”

He says the telehealth setup has at times proved to be a positive distraction in the clinic as children are generally interested in the technology.

The service is targeting children and adolescents initially but will expand to adult services in time.

A second pilot clinic was held on April 5 linking to Kerikeri, and an assessment will now be undertaken and a decision made on scale and timing of rolling out the service.

“At this stage, there appears to be strong potential to link up the oral health locations throughout Northland, including the mobile dental clinics,” said Davidson.

“Linking the more rural mobile dental clinics would provide a significant improvement to access of care for those families unable to travel to centres.”

He says the telehealth service also provides support and peer contact engagement from dentists to dental and oral health therapists who are working in the community service.

“Telehealth enables assessment in real time and discussion with whānau members who are with the patient and is a collaborative tool, enabling knowledge up skilling for the clinical teams involved,” Davidson said.

“Telehealth reduces travel for clinicians, reduces travel for families and provides faster access to specialist dental care.”

This article first appeared on eHealthNews.nz.

Topics: 
Telehealth
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