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Alcohol and the dental team: relevance, risk, role and responsibility

From Volume 44, Issue 6, June 2017 | Pages 495-501

Authors

Simon Shepherd

BDS, MDSc, MFDS RCS(Ed), RCPS(Glasg)

Clinical Lecturer/StR in Oral Surgery University of Dundee, Dean of the Dental Faculty of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Glasgow

Articles by Simon Shepherd

Graham Ogden

BDS, MDSc, PhD, FDS RCPS(Glasg) FDS RCS(Ed), FHEA, FRSA

Professor of Oral Surgery and Head of the Division of Oral and Maxillofacial Clinical Sciences at the University of Dundee; Dean of the Dental Faculty of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, Glasgow

Articles by Graham Ogden

Abstract

An enquiry about alcohol use, whenever a patient presents for dental treatment, is now firmly established within the taking of a social history. Dental professionals are well placed to provide relevant alcohol advice. Indeed, it is now embedded within the training of undergraduates as required by the General Dental Council (GDC) in Preparing for Practice.1 Practitioners therefore need to be aware of recent changes in alcohol guidelines commissioned by the UK Chief Medical Officers. This paper explores alcohol-related harm, screening tools to facilitate an enquiry, and our roles and responsibilities for providing alcohol advice accepting the limited time available within the dental appointment.

CPD/Clinical Relevance: Alcohol has both local and systemic effects. Understanding these effects, the recently updated guidelines and available screening tools are important steps towards supporting dental professionals in the provision of alcohol-related advice.

Article

A greater recognition of the adverse effects of alcohol, both locally (on the oral cavity) and systemically, has helped heighten the importance of asking dental patients alcohol-relevant questions. As such, recording alcohol intake is now firmly embedded within the taking of a social history.

One important reason for asking about the lifestyle risk factors of alcohol and tobacco is their potential role in the development of various oral diseases, not least that of oral cancer.

It is important to note that this approach focuses on a small and (by comparison with other alcohol-related harms) relatively rare disease. Although, as dental health professionals, the oral cavity is our natural environment, under the more encompassing scope of health professionals we hold the responsibility for understanding and delivering alcohol advice related to its broader effects too. As such, our awareness should extend to its link to cancers of the larynx, phayrnx, breast, liver and colorectal cancer. There is also emerging evidence for an association with skin, pancreas, stomach, lung, gallbladder cancer, not to mention the role alcohol plays in the development of liver disease, mental health probelms, interpersonal and domestic violence as well as road traffic accidents.

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