Challenges in the uptake of telemedicine in dentistry.

Rural Remote Health

School of Anatomy, Physiology and Human Biology, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.

Published: November 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Oral care services are scarce in rural areas, leading underserved individuals to seek dental help from non-dental providers, pushing the interest in telemedicine for oral health.
  • - While there’s a lack of strong evidence about the cost-effectiveness of telemedicine, it’s shown to reduce healthcare inequalities, especially in rural-urban settings, like Australia.
  • - Successful teledentistry requires overcoming various challenges at individual, infrastructure, and organizational levels, and addressing these barriers can help promote its acceptance and utility in the healthcare system.

Article Abstract

With the availability of oral care services very unevenly distributed in rural or remote areas, underserved people seek oral care from non-dental care providers. Against this backdrop, and coupled with the decreasing cost of and innovations in technology, there is a growing interest in the adoption of telemedicine services. Regardless of the lack of good-quality evidence supporting the cost-effectiveness of telemedicine, evidence already indicates that telemedicine, even with extra costs, helps in reducing the inequalities in the provision of primary health care. Telemedicine has the potential to overcome geographical barriers and contribute to closing the rural-urban healthcare gap in Australia and many other regions. Although research examining different teledentistry applications has found that this technology can be successfully integrated into different settings, there is little active teledentistry practice in Australia. The integration of telemedicine into the mainstream oral health system is a complex and collaborative process in which numerous factors at individual, infrastructure and organisational levels are involved. Addressing the barriers that delay the implementation of a teledentistry service can provide valuable insights into its lack of acceptance and establish an evidence base that can help to inform future decisions about the benefits of teledentistry.

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