Training Program to Help Dental Professions Identify Patients with Eating Disorders

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By University of South Florida
October 26, 2009

A University of South Florida College of Public Health researcher has received a highly competitive National Institutes of Health grant to create and evaluate a web-based training program to help dentists and dental hygienists identify patients with eating disorders and refer them for treatment. Rita DeBate, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Community and Family Health, was awarded the two-year NIH Challenge Grant through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).

Eating disorders, such as bulimia and anorexia nervosa, have potentially serious health consequences that can contribute to, or cause, death, according to the U.S. Center for Disease Control’s National Center for Health Statistics. Most people diagnosed with an eating disorder are under age 25, but deaths from eating disorders are highest among those between the ages of 25 and 64, NCHS statistics show.

Early identification, referral, and treatment significantly increase the likelihood of recovery, said Dr. DeBate. “Oral health providers play a fundamental role in the early detection, patient-specific oral treatment, and referral for care of eating disorders, because they are often the first health professionals to observe overt health effects. However, few dentists and dental hygienists are practicing this important clinical responsibility.”

Over the two NIH-funded years, Dr. DeBate, the project’s principal investigator, and co-principal investigator Herbert Severson, PhD, senior research scientist at Oregon Research Institute, will customize their prototype web program, “Eating Disorders and Oral Health,” for use within dental and dental hygiene academic training programs. Adaptation of the prototype will be guided by input from dental and dental hygiene faculty and directors, an expert consultant panel, previous pilot data, and current e-learning methodology. Evaluation of the adapted web-based training program will involve 12 dental schools and dental hygiene programs across the country.

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