Dental
Assistants are used to working with patients who are suffering from poor dental
hygiene. Statistics show more than 10.5 million people in the United States
are affected by drug and alcohol use. Substance abuse is easily recognizable by
Dental Assistants. Many parents are left completely dumbfounded when the Dental
Assistant has to inform them that their child appears to have a drug dependency
and it is affecting their oral health. Types of drug abuse Dental Assistants
encounter include sedatives, barbiturates, and narcotics.
The
effects of drug use in relation to oral health care include missing dental
appointments, fear, anxiety, cravings for sweets, the risk of infection from
Hepatitis B and HIV, oral neglect, periodontal disease, gingivitis, and painful
gums. It is easy to see from this list how taking drugs can lead to ongoing
oral health issues. If the drug use continues tooth lose and inflamed gum areas
may increase.
Dental
Assistants are often consulted when individuals call the dental office or come
in complaining of severe tooth pain. This can be a ploy on the patient’s behalf
to obtain drugs from the dental facility, either in the office or in the form
of a prescription. Dental Assistants need to watch for such scenarios and
listen to their gut reaction in such cases. Often, these individuals will come
in at closing time, get a prescription and an appointment to return the next
morning. They get the prescription filled, but never show up for the appointment.
Since
drug use is so common, Dental Assistants and other dental staff should be
properly trained in the areas of drug use, drug interactions, and promoting
drug treatment. If your employer does not offer such training, it is important
that you bring it to their attention. In the mean time, it is your
responsibility to train yourself by educating yourself in these areas. You can
do so with textbooks or online materials.
Dental
Assistants can provide patients with education, early intervention, and
motivation to seek treatment for drug use. Often Dental Assistants can help the
patient find a treatment program to look into. It is important for the Dental
Assistant to treat the patient with respect, but fully disclose the risks
involved in continued drug use as well as they affects to their dental health.
This is where those valuable communication skills come in to play.
Dental
Assistants need to be very careful when providing dental care to drug users.
Since the types of drugs they use generally aren’t disclosed, it is unknown
what types of behaviors they will display. They may become violent or
experience a chemical reaction when treated with a local anesthetic.
Treating
patients who use drugs also raises the risk of being exposed to communicable
diseases. All precautions need to be taken to protect yourself. Most dental
facilities have policies and procedures in place for dealing with individuals
who come in for appointments under the influence of drugs and other substances.
However, for ongoing drug users, you might not even know they have been using
anything prior to treating them.
As
a Dental Assistant, if you suspect a patient has been using drugs, approach the
situation confidentially and carefully. Your main goal is to make sure other
patients and staff members are not at risk of being harmed. You have the right
as a Dental Assistant to refuse treatment to anyone for any reason. While most
Dental Assistants don’t exercise this right often, there is not reason to put
yourself or others at risk.
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