Archive for » April 10th, 2012«

Proposal by central Ohio officials would give Ohio U 70-plus acres for new …

DUBLIN, Ohio — Officials in a central Ohio city have proposed giving Ohio University more than 70 acres to build a medical college.

The university in Athens in southeast Ohio has pledged to build the Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine in the Columbus suburb of Dublin, with a goal of opening in 2014 with at least 50 students. The Columbus Dispatch reports (http://bit.ly/HDOPnV ) the proposal discussed by the city council on Monday will be revisited on April 24.

Also Monday, the state controlling board approved the university’s $11 million purchase of about 15 acres and two buildings for the school. The city’s plan involves 70-plus acres surrounding that property.

University Executive Vice President and Provost Pam Benoit says plans also include a day-care center, residential housing, cultural facilities and research laboratories.

___

Information from: The Columbus Dispatch, http://www.dispatch.com




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University of Utah trustees approve dental school

University of Utah trustees on Tuesday approved a School of Dentistry, the first new college at the U. in years, along with a related four-year doctoral program, all funded by $37 million in private pledges. The school will enroll its first cohort of 20 dental students in fall 2013.

The doctoral program, which still requires approval of the state Board of Regents, won’t be the first in Utah. That was established last year by the private, non-profit Roseman University in South Jordan. But the U.’s will be the nation’s first dentistry school established at a research institution in 30 years, according to G. Lynn Powell, the U.’s interim dean for dental education.


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Since 1980, the U. has operated a regional dental education program, through the School of Medicine’s pathology department, in which Utah students complete their first two years of dental training before transferring to Nebraska’s Creighton University for the final two years. Part of their tuition is reimbursed if they return to Utah to practice.

The U. plans to build a home for the school with an anonymous gift. Potential sites have been selected at Research Park or near the medical school. Officials want the dental school to crack the nation’s top 10 percent of dental programs within 10 years. The program will be able to expand to handle cohort classes as large as 50 students.

Copyright 2012 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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University of Utah trustees approve dental school

University of Utah trustees on Tuesday approved a School of Dentistry, the first new college at the U. in years, along with a related four-year doctoral program, all funded by $37 million in private pledges. The school will enroll its first cohort of 20 dental students in fall 2013.

The doctoral program, which still requires approval of the state Board of Regents, won’t be the first in Utah. That was established last year by the private, non-profit Roseman University in South Jordan. But the U.’s will be the nation’s first dentistry school established at a research institution in 30 years, according to G. Lynn Powell, the U.’s interim dean for dental education.


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Read All Comments (6)

Since 1980, the U. has operated a regional dental education program, through the School of Medicine’s pathology department, in which Utah students complete their first two years of dental training before transferring to Nebraska’s Creighton University for the final two years. Part of their tuition is reimbursed if they return to Utah to practice.

The U. plans to build a home for the school with an anonymous gift. Potential sites have been selected at Research Park or near the medical school. Officials want the dental school to crack the nation’s top 10 percent of dental programs within 10 years. The program will be able to expand to handle cohort classes as large as 50 students.

Copyright 2012 The Salt Lake Tribune. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Dental Therapists ‘Safe’ Pulling American Teeth, Study Suggests

By: Betty Ann Bowser

Photo by Jeff J. Mitchell/Getty Images

If you’re like most Americans, you probably think getting a tooth filled is about as much fun as undergoing a colonoscopy.

But oral health is no less an important part of staying healthy. Untreated dental disease can lead to serious medical conditions and — in extremely rare cases — it can kill you.

In spite of that, more and more Americans have been experiencing trouble accessing a dentist in recent years. It’s not just the shortage of dentists that’s the problem. It’s also a reflection of how many people can’t afford the cost of care or who lack dental insurance.

Also exacerbating the problem is the fact that a lot of dentists won’t treat Medicaid patients. Reimbursement rates in the federal-state program are often notoriously low.

So in recent years, a debate has been growing over whether to introduce a new type of provider — dental therapists — to the scene. Dental therapists are limited practitioners who are trained to do “basic” dental work, including X-rays, preventative care, filings and extractions. In the countries where they practice today, most of them are carefully supervised by fully licensed and trained dentists.

Today, those who argue for the widespread use of dental therapists in the U.S. got some support in the form of a massive, worldwide study of dental therapists.

Sponsored and paid for by the W.K.Kellogg Foundation, the report found that dental therapists offer treatment that is “technically competent, safe and effective,” especially for children.

The study involved the review of more than 1,100 pages of documents on the history and practice of dental therapists in 54 countries.

The lead author of the study, Dr. David Nash, a pediatric dentist and the William R.Willard professor of dental education at the University of Kentucky College of Dentistry, said the study was “absolutely unprecedented” and should “put to rest once and for all” the controversy over whether dental therapists are a safe and effective way to provide basic dental care for people in areas where there is a shortage of dentists.

In the United States, dental therapists were first introduced in 2005 to Alaska Natives who live in isolated villages accessible only by air. Most of the communities have no dentist and — until dental therapists were brought into tribal communities — most of the people who live in these out-of-the-way places had no dental care at all (watch the NewsHour’s full report here).

The only other place dental therapists practice is in Minnesota, where a handful of people have been trained. The first group graduated last year and began treating people in under-served areas several months ago. Five other states are currently considering legislation to provide for dental therapists.

In recent years, studies conducted by the federal government and some private foundations have determined that nearly 40 percent of the American population doesn’t see a dentist at least once a year. And there are hundreds of pockets across the country where there aren’t enough dentists to serve the number of people who live there.

Ever since the introduction of dental therapists in Alaska seven years ago, a controversy has been growing over whether the rest of the states should be allowed to train dental therapists and allow them to practice.

The American Dental Association and other professional dental societies have opposed this idea and have vociferously protested any attempts to bring dental therapists to the lower 48. The ADA has consistently maintained that dental therapists are not adequately trained to perform irreversible surgeries — primarily extractions.

In a statement, the organization criticized the Kellogg study, saying it failed to “rise to the level of a systematic literature review, nor does it adequately address some of the key indicators of whether and to what extent the use of therapists improves pubic oral health.”

Training more people to X-ray, file, and pull teeth doesn’t cut to the heart of the issue, the ADA contends. America’s dental crisis will only be reversed through more structural changes, the statement said, including community water fluoridation; first dental visits by age 1; oral health education, assessments and sealant programs in schools; better integration with the medical community; and “realistic funding of care for those in greatest need.”

“The nation will never drill, fill and extract its way out of what amounts to a public health crisis among some populations,” the statement said. “Throwing more ‘treaters’ into the mix amounts to digging a hole in an ocean of disease. Instead, what is required is a fundamental shift in oral health from a model of surgical intervention to one of disease prevention, because virtually all dental disease is preventable.”

Read the full report here and the ADA’s response here. Then revisit the NewsHour’s two-part series on America’s dental crisis, including Betty Ann Bowser’s full report from Alaska on the dental therapist training program.


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Dublin planning to donate land for medical college

By 

Holly Zachariah

The Columbus Dispatch

Tuesday April 10, 2012 7:36 AM

Dublin officials see the new medical college that Ohio University has pledged to build in the
city as such an opportunity for the region that they are willing to give the university more than
70 acres to make the project happen.

As part of an agreement introduced to City Council last night, the city also would pay for any
road improvements necessary for OU’s $24 million Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, which is
planned for 7001-7003 Post Rd., just off the Rt. 33 interchange. The college is expected to open
with at least 50 students in fall 2014.

The state controlling board yesterday approved the university’s $11 million purchase of 14.8
acres and two existing buildings at the site. City Council later unveiled its plan to give the
university two tracts the city owns surrounding that land — about 71 more acres.

Dr. Pam Benoit, OU’s executive vice president and provost, was at the meeting, and Mayor Tim
Lecklider told her the project is just the beginning of a partnership with the university: “We’re
going to be with you every step of the way.”

A year go, the university announced a $105 million donation from the Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations — the largest private gift in the school’s history — to create an extended campus and
to support expanded research and treatment of diabetes.

Officials said the first $29 million of the gift would be used to buy land, build a medical
college in central Ohio and develop its campus.

Last night, Benoit said that the university’s plans for the land surrounding the new medical
college would include, by 2017, a day-care center, some residential housing, arts and cultural
facilities and research laboratories.

The agreement on Dublin’s incentives will come before council again on April 23. If it is
approved, the city would retain about 25 acres fronting the highway, with an eye toward development
to support the medical campus. Both OU and the city would have a say in deciding how that space
develops, according to the proposed agreement, and money could change hands for it in the
future.

All seemed to agree last night that the next priority would be a hotel/conference center in that
location. Benoit said work could begin on a hotel as soon as 2014.

The agreement before council says the city expects to eventually approve a
tax-increment-financing district for the area, a move that would allow for future tax payments to
be set aside in a special fund.

The university is exempt from most property taxes, but the special taxing district would be set
up for what’s not exempt, most likely the conference center or whatever development might come on
that third tract of land.

Dublin Development Director Dana McDaniel said before the meeting that the city is working to
decide where it will move the Dublin Entrepreneurial Center, which is housed in one of the
buildings that the university is buying. The city had amassed the surrounding land in hopes of
bringing in a research and/or biomedical project. This agreement makes it clear that if the
university doesn’t make good on its promise of the medical college, the donated property reverts to
Dublin.

McDaniel said he has no doubt that it will come together beautifully.

“The medical college will become an anchor for what we’ve always envisioned as an innovation
corridor,” he said. “This will be a benefit to the entire region and its efforts to make a push in
the biomedical and research fields.”

hzachariah@dispatch.com


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Dental X-rays Linked to Brain Tumors

Dental X-rays Linked to Brain Tumors

dental xray

April 10, 2012 — Getting frequent dental X-rays appears to increase the risk for a commonly diagnosed brain tumor, a new study finds.

Exposure to ionizing radiation — the kind found in X-rays — �is the biggest known environmental risk factor for largely non-malignant meningioma brain tumors. Routine dental X-rays are among the most common sources of radiation for most healthy people in the U.S.

The new study suggests that performing frequent X-rays may expose patients to unnecessary risk.

“These findings should not prevent anyone from going to the dentist,” says lead researcher and neurosurgeon Elizabeth B. Claus, MD, PhD, of Yale University School of Medicine and Boston’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “But it appears that a large percentage of patients receive annual X-rays instead of every two to three years, which is the recommendation for healthy adults.”

Dental X-ray, Benign Brain Tumors

While the vast majority of meningiomas are non-malignant, they often grow to be very large and can cause a wide range of potentially serious symptoms, including vision and hearing loss, frequent headaches, memory loss, and even seizures.

They are the most frequently diagnosed brain tumors among adults in the United States, accounting for about a third of all primary brain and central nervous system tumors.

Several small studies have suggested a link between cumulative dental X-ray exposures and meningiomas, but the findings were inconclusive.

In the newly published study — the largest ever to examine the question — people who reported having “bitewing” X-rays at least yearly were found to have a 40% to 90% greater risk of meningioma.

The study shows an association but does not prove a cause-effect relationship.

The study included about 1,400 meningioma patients between the ages of 20 and 79 when they were diagnosed between the spring of 2006 and the spring of 2011.

When the patients’ self-reported dental histories were compared to adults with similar characteristics who did not have the brain tumors, lifetime exposure to either bitewing or panoramic dental X-rays — which include the upper and lower jaw — was significantly associated with meningioma risk. This risk was higher in people who received panoramic X-rays when they were younger than 10.

The meningioma patients were more than twice as likely as the adults without brain tumors to have had dental X-rays at some point during their lives, Claus tells WebMD.

The study appears in the April 10 issue of the American Cancer Association journal Cancer.

Annual Dental X-rays Not Recommended

Claus tells WebMD that the American Dental Association recommends healthy adults receive routine mouth X-rays every two to three years. Dental X-rays are recommended every one to two years for children and every 1.5 to three years for teens. Children often require more X-rays than adults because of their developing teeth and jaws and increased likelihood for cavities.

Neurosurgeon Michael Schulder, MD, agrees that the newly published findings make a good case for limiting the frequency of dental X-rays whenever possible.

Schulder is vice chairman of the department of neurosurgery at the Cushing Neuroscience Institute, which is part of the North Shore-LIJ Health System in Manhasset, New York.

“The chance of these tumors arising in patients who were X-rayed yearly was low,” he notes in a news release. “Nonetheless, dentists and their patients should strongly consider obtaining X-rays less often than yearly unless symptoms suggest the need for imaging.”


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Dental X-rays also implicated in thyroid cancer



(CNN) –

A study published this week in the journal Cancer shows that people who have had dental X-rays are more likely to develop a type of brain tumor called meningioma than those who have not. This does not prove that X-rays cause tumors, but supports previous research about the connection. Dental X-rays have also been implicated in thyroid cancer.

“It’s a cautionary tale … we do know that radiation can cause tumors, and we have to be judicious with its use,” said Dr. Donald O’Rourke, an associate professor of neurosurgery at the University of Pennsylvania who was not involved in the study.

Meningiomas are the most frequently occurring tumor in the head. They are located in the meninges, the tissues covering the brain. The vast majority are “benign” – or noncancerous – but, depending on their location, could cause blindness or other serious neurological damage. Those in the skull base are more difficult to remove in their entirety. Depending on the tumor, surgery may not be required.

Dr. Elizabeth Brooks Claus, director of medical research at Yale University’s School of Public Health, led the Cancer study, which focused on patients whose tumors required surgery. The patients were mostly Caucasian because of the regions from which they came; Claus’ group plans a follow-up looking at more African Americans, who have a statistically increased risk for meningiomas.

The average age of the 1,433 patient participants was 57, which means their exposures to dental X-rays were likely of a higher radiation doses because of older technology, Claus said. But they ranged between 20 and 79 years old, and came from select parts of the United States. Researchers also looked at data from 1,350 people with similar characteristics who had never had a meningioma.

The meningioma patients had more than a two-fold increased likelihood of having ever experienced a dental X-ray test called a bitewing exam. Depending on the age at which the exams were done, those who’d had these exams on a yearly basis, or more often, were 1.4 to 1.9 times more likely to have had a meningioma.

Four of these X-rays is about the same amount of radiation you’re exposed to in a typical day: .005 .millisieverts, according to the American College of Radiology.

Panorex exams, which involve images of all of the teeth on one film, were also linked to meningioma risks. If study participants had panorex exams when they were younger than 10 years old, their risk of meningioma went up 4.9 times. One of these around-the-head X-rays carries about twice as much radiation as four bitewing X-rays.

“My impression is that people get more dental X-rays more frequently than the American Dental Association says,” Claus said.

For an adult without cavities and no increased risk for cavities, who is not new to his or her dentist, x-rays are recommended every two to three years. For a child without cavities who’s not at increased risk, the interval is every one to two years, according to this chart from the Food and Drug Administration.

There’s currently a low threshold for dentists to order dental X-rays, says Dr. Keith Black, director of the Maxine Dunitz Neurosurgical Institute at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, who was not involved in the study. Even if X-rays are not necessary for a procedure, dentists often request them as part an annual exam. Black hopes dentists will pay attention to this research linking the X-rays to brain tumors.

There are important uses for dental X-rays in making decisions regarding certain procedures. But if the teeth are otherwise healthy, Black recommends against the radiation.

There is a latency period – a lag time – of about 20 to 25 years with meningiomas induced by radiation, O’Rourke said. Only about 1% to 5% of meningiomas are cancerous, but in people with known increased radiation exposure, that risk can go up, he said.

But Dr. Otis Brawley, Chief Medical Officer of the American Cancer Society, which publishes the journal Cancer, points out that the study relied upon individuals’ memories of how many dental X-rays they’d had, including in childhood, so there is room for error in that regard. And, again, it does not prove that X-rays directly cause tumors.

There are, however, estimates that up to 1% of all cancers in the United States are due to medical radiation, Brawley said.

In response to the study announcement, the American Dental Association also mentioned the study’s reliance on individuals’ memories.

“Studies have shown that the ability to recall information is often imperfect,” said a written statement from the ADA. “Therefore, the results of studies that use this design can be unreliable …”

The ADA also pointed out that the study included people who received dental x-rays decades ago from older technology that exposed them to more radiation. “The ADA encourages further research in the interest of patient safety,” said the statement.

If you’ve already been getting annual dental X-rays, there’s nothing you can do to mitigate whatever risk you already have. But Black said this research is important to keep in mind when making decisions in the future, and for children.


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Dublin to donate land for medical college

By 

Holly Zachariah

The Columbus Dispatch

Tuesday April 10, 2012 12:08 AM

Dublin officials see the new medical college that Ohio University has pledged to build in the
city as such an opportunity for the region that they are willing to give the university more than
70 acres to make the project happen.

As part of an agreement introduced to City Council last night, the city also would pay for any
road improvements necessary for OU’s $24 million Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine, which is
planned for 7001-7003 Post Rd., just off the Rt. 33 interchange. The college is expected to open
with at least 50 students in fall 2014.

The state controlling board yesterday approved the university’s $11 million purchase of 14.8
acres and two existing buildings at the site. City Council later unveiled its plan to give the
university two tracts the city owns surrounding that land — about 71 more acres.

Dr. Pam Benoit, OU’s executive vice president and provost, was at the meeting, and Mayor Tim
Lecklider told her the project is just the beginning of a partnership with the university: “We’re
going to be with you every step of the way.”

A year go, the university announced a $105 million donation from the Osteopathic Heritage
Foundations — the largest private gift in the school’s history — to create an extended campus and
to support expanded research and treatment of diabetes.

Officials said the first $29 million of the gift would be used to buy land, build a medical
college in central Ohio and develop its campus.

Last night, Benoit said that the university’s plans for the land surrounding the new medical
college would include, by 2017, a day-care center, some residential housing, arts and cultural
facilities and research laboratories.

The agreement on Dublin’s incentives will come before council again on April 23. If it is
approved, the city would retain about 25 acres fronting the highway, with an eye toward development
to support the medical campus. Both OU and the city would have a say in deciding how that space
develops, according to the proposed agreement, and money could change hands for it in the
future.

All seemed to agree last night that the next priority would be a hotel/conference center in that
location. Benoit said work could begin on a hotel as soon as 2014.

The agreement before council says the city expects to eventually approve a
tax-increment-financing district for the area, a move that would allow for future tax payments to
be set aside in a special fund.

The university is exempt from most property taxes, but the special taxing district would be set
up for what’s not exempt, most likely the conference center or whatever development might come on
that third tract of land.

Dublin Development Director Dana McDaniel said before the meeting that the city is working to
decide where it will move the Dublin Entrepreneurial Center, which is housed in one of the
buildings that the university is buying. The city had amassed the surrounding land in hopes of
bringing in a research and/or biomedical project. This agreement makes it clear that if the
university doesn’t make good on its promise of the medical college, the donated property reverts to
Dublin.

McDaniel said he has no doubt that it will come together beautifully.

“The medical college will become an anchor for what we’ve always envisioned as an innovation
corridor,” he said. “This will be a benefit to the entire region and its efforts to make a push in
the biomedical and research fields.”

hzachariah@dispatch.com


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Dental X-rays linked to tumor risk

Researchers surveyed 1,433 patients who had the brain tumors, called meningiomas, and compared them with 1,350 others who were tumor-free, and asked them about their dental X-ray history. They found that people who had meningiomas were twice as likely as those who did not have to ever have a bitewing X-ray. Those who reported receiving such X-rays at least once per year had increased risk at all ages surveyed.


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Dental X-rays linked to common brain tumor

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Public release date: 10-Apr-2012

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Contact: Lori Shanks
ljshanks@partners.org
617-534-1604
Brigham and Women’s Hospital

Research finds correlation between frequent dental X-rays and increased risk of developing meningioma

Boston, MA Meningioma, the most common primary brain tumor in the United States, accounts for about 33 percent of all primary brain tumors. The most consistently identified environmental risk factor for meningioma is exposure to ionizing radiation. In the largest study of its kind, researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), Yale University School of Medicine, Duke University, UCSF and Baylor College of Medicine have found a correlation between past frequent dental x-rays, which are the most common source of exposure to ionizing radiation in the U.S, and an increased risk of developing meningioma. These findings are published in the April 10, 2012 issue of Cancer.

“The findings suggest that dental x-rays obtained in the past at increased frequently and at a young age, may be associated with increased risk of developing this common type of brain tumor,” said Elizabeth Claus, MD, PhD, a neurosurgeon at BWH and Yale University School of Medicine at New Haven. “This research suggests that although dental x-rays are an important tool in maintaining good oral health, efforts to moderate exposure to this form of imaging may be of benefit to some patients.”

Claus and her colleagues studied data from 1,433 patients diagnosed with meningioma between 20 and 79 years of age between May 2006 and April 2011 and compared the information to a control group of 1350 participants with similar characteristics. They found that patients with meningioma were twice as likely to report having a specific type of dental x-ray called a bitewing exam, and that those who reported having them yearly or more frequently were 1.4 to 1.9 times as likely to develop a meningioma when compared to the control group. Additionally, researchers report that there was an even greater increased risk of meningioma in patients who reported having a panorex x-ray exam. Those who reported having this exam taken under the age of 10, were 4.9 times more likely to develop a meningioma compared to controls. Those who reported having the exam yearly or more frequently than once a year were nearly 3 times as likely to develop meningioma when compared to the control group.

“It is important to note that the dental x-rays performed today use a much lower dose of radiation than in the past,” said Claus.

According to background information in the study, The American Dental Association’s statement on the use of dental radiographs emphasizes the need for dentists to examine the risks and benefits of dental x-rays and confirms that there is little evidence to support the use of dental x-rays in healthy patients at preset intervals.

This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health RO1 grants CA109468, CA109461 CA109745, CA108473, CA109475 and by the Brain Science Foundation and the Meningioma Mommas.

Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) is a 793-bed nonprofit teaching affiliate of Harvard Medical School and a founding member of Partners HealthCare, an integrated health care delivery network. BWH is the home of the Carl J. and Ruth Shapiro Cardiovascular Center, the most advanced center of its kind. BWH is committed to excellence in patient care with expertise in virtually every specialty of medicine and surgery. The BWH medical preeminence dates back to 1832, and today that rich history in clinical care is coupled with its national leadership in quality improvement and patient safety initiatives and its dedication to educating and training the next generation of health care professionals. Through investigation and discovery conducted at its Biomedical Research Institute (BRI), www.brighamandwomens.org/research , BWH is an international leader in basic, clinical and translational research on human diseases, involving more than 900 physician-investigators and renowned biomedical scientists and faculty supported by more than $537 M in funding. BWH is also home to major landmark epidemiologic population studies, including the Nurses’ and Physicians’ Health Studies and the Women’s Health Initiative. For more information about BWH, please visit www.brighamandwomens.org


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