Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study

Abstract Background This study aimed to assess whether there are potential areas for efficiency improvements in the National Health Service (NHS) orthodontic service in North West England and to assess the socioeconomic status (SES)-related equity of the outcomes achieved by the NHS. Methods The stu...

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Main Authors: Juliet Price, William Whittaker, Stephen Birch, Paul Brocklehurst, Martin Tickle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-09-01
Series:BMC Oral Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12903-017-0414-1
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spelling doaj-c8e6dc811dde4285a0ed4696794f96f32020-11-24T22:24:47ZengBMCBMC Oral Health1472-68312017-09-011711910.1186/s12903-017-0414-1Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational studyJuliet Price0William Whittaker1Stephen Birch2Paul Brocklehurst3Martin Tickle4Division of Dentistry, School of Medical Sciences, University of ManchesterManchester Centre for Health Economics, School of Health Sciences, University of ManchesterDepartment of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, McMaster UniversityInstitute of Medical and Social Care Research, Bangor UniversityDivision of Dentistry, School of Medical Sciences, University of ManchesterAbstract Background This study aimed to assess whether there are potential areas for efficiency improvements in the National Health Service (NHS) orthodontic service in North West England and to assess the socioeconomic status (SES)-related equity of the outcomes achieved by the NHS. Methods The study involved a retrospective analysis of 2008–2012 administrative data, and the study population comprised patients aged ≥10 who started NHS primary care orthodontic treatment in North West England in 2008. The proportions of treatments that were discontinued early and ended with residual need (based on post-treatment Index of Orthodontic Treatment Need [IOTN] scores that met or exceeded the NHS eligibility threshold of 3.6) and the associated NHS expenditure were calculated. In addition, the associations with SES were investigated using linear probability models. Results We found that 7.6% of treatments resulted in discontinuation (which was associated with an NHS annual expenditure of £2.3 m), and a further 19.4% (£5.9 m) had a missing outcome record. Furthermore, 5.2% of treatments resulted in residual need (£1.6 m), and a further 38.3% (£11.6 m) had missing IOTN data (due to either a missing outcome record or an incomplete IOTN outcome field in the record), which led to an annual NHS expenditure of £13.2 m (44% of the total expenditure) on treatments that are a potential source of inefficiency. Compared to the patients in the highest SES group, those in the lower SES groups were more likely both to discontinue treatment and to have residual need on treatment completion. Conclusions Substantial inefficiencies were evident in the NHS orthodontic service, with 7.6% of treatments ending in discontinuation (£2.3 m) and 5.2% ending with residual need (£1.6 m). Over a third of cases had unreported IOTN outcome scores, which highlights the need to improve the outcome monitoring systems. In addition, the SES gradients indicate inequity in the orthodontic outcomes, with children from disadvantaged communities having poorer outcomes compared to their more affluent peers.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12903-017-0414-1OrthodonticsMalocclusionTreatment outcomesSocioeconomic status
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juliet Price
William Whittaker
Stephen Birch
Paul Brocklehurst
Martin Tickle
spellingShingle Juliet Price
William Whittaker
Stephen Birch
Paul Brocklehurst
Martin Tickle
Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study
BMC Oral Health
Orthodontics
Malocclusion
Treatment outcomes
Socioeconomic status
author_facet Juliet Price
William Whittaker
Stephen Birch
Paul Brocklehurst
Martin Tickle
author_sort Juliet Price
title Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study
title_short Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study
title_full Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study
title_fullStr Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study
title_full_unstemmed Socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in England’s state-funded National Health Service: a retrospective observational study
title_sort socioeconomic disparities in orthodontic treatment outcomes and expenditure on orthodontics in england’s state-funded national health service: a retrospective observational study
publisher BMC
series BMC Oral Health
issn 1472-6831
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Abstract Background This study aimed to assess whether there are potential areas for efficiency improvements in the National Health Service (NHS) orthodontic service in North West England and to assess the socioeconomic status (SES)-related equity of the outcomes achieved by the NHS. Methods The study involved a retrospective analysis of 2008–2012 administrative data, and the study population comprised patients aged ≥10 who started NHS primary care orthodontic treatment in North West England in 2008. The proportions of treatments that were discontinued early and ended with residual need (based on post-treatment Index of Orthodontic Treatment Need [IOTN] scores that met or exceeded the NHS eligibility threshold of 3.6) and the associated NHS expenditure were calculated. In addition, the associations with SES were investigated using linear probability models. Results We found that 7.6% of treatments resulted in discontinuation (which was associated with an NHS annual expenditure of £2.3 m), and a further 19.4% (£5.9 m) had a missing outcome record. Furthermore, 5.2% of treatments resulted in residual need (£1.6 m), and a further 38.3% (£11.6 m) had missing IOTN data (due to either a missing outcome record or an incomplete IOTN outcome field in the record), which led to an annual NHS expenditure of £13.2 m (44% of the total expenditure) on treatments that are a potential source of inefficiency. Compared to the patients in the highest SES group, those in the lower SES groups were more likely both to discontinue treatment and to have residual need on treatment completion. Conclusions Substantial inefficiencies were evident in the NHS orthodontic service, with 7.6% of treatments ending in discontinuation (£2.3 m) and 5.2% ending with residual need (£1.6 m). Over a third of cases had unreported IOTN outcome scores, which highlights the need to improve the outcome monitoring systems. In addition, the SES gradients indicate inequity in the orthodontic outcomes, with children from disadvantaged communities having poorer outcomes compared to their more affluent peers.
topic Orthodontics
Malocclusion
Treatment outcomes
Socioeconomic status
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12903-017-0414-1
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