Saturday, May 31, 2014

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Thursday, May 29, 2014

What Do Changes in Dental Implant Technology Mean for You?


If you have a missing tooth, you have many choices for tooth replacement -- including dental implants, the most stable and efficient of all the dental prosthetic options. Dental implants are a remarkable advancement in dental technology, but they may not be for everyone, as even the most advanced procedures can be limiting or invasive.

Although conventional dental implants are one of the greatest inventions in dentistry in recent years, the dental implant procedure may not be ideal for some candidates.

Some don't like the idea of waiting almost a year to have their tooth replaced. Nor is it for the faint of heart -- fearful patients may not be open to the idea of having dental implant surgery. While local anesthesia is used to prevent pain, patients often have discomfort as the dental implant heals. All of these factors may keep patients from replacing their missing teeth, which can lead to other dental problems down the line!

Improvements in Implants

Luckily, one of the best things to come along in dentistry just got better. New dental technology has improved the dental implant procedure, and dentists literally have the process down to a science! Patients no longer have to wait to replace their missing tooth -- now the dental implant, post and dental crown can be set in just one visit. With immediate dental implants, you don't need to live with a gap in your teeth or wear a fake temporary cap while you wait for the dental implant to heal. And with single-visit dental implants becoming more successful, more patients are inquiring about this procedure.

Using an ICAT Machine, your dentist prepares your dental implant surgery through 3-D imaging. Dentists plan the same-day procedure through a virtual mock-up of your mouth, which eliminates cutting through the gums to find the bone. This, in turn, means less pain and healing time for the patient, and there's no need for a follow-up visit to complete the treatment! During the planning stages, your prosthetic tooth is made in a lab, and will be ready in time for your dental surgery. This amazing procedure bypasses the osseointregration period, where the implant fuses to the bone. Although the implant still needs to heal, it can do so with the dental crown attached, and you can go on with your life as usual!



The Micro Mini

Mini-implants are the new fashion in implant technology. Used primarily for dentures, a series of mini-implants are placed through the gums, and their posts are used to anchor the appliance into place. Mini-implants mean less pain and healing time, and normally cost less than traditional dental implants. These cutting edge dental implants also don't need to wait on the healing process for the final step -- patients can start wearing their replacement teeth right away.

Traditional dental implants once meant having to pay for a new dental appliance -- but with mini-implants, patients don't need to replace their dentures. Existing dentures can be fitted to attach to the posts, enabling patients to return home with a full set of teeth immediately after their surgery. As mini-implants gain popularity, they are now being used to anchor such restorations as a dental crown and dental bridge as well!

Explore Your Options

If you have the time and patience, then traditional dental implants might be for you. But if you want more -- or less -- out of the dental implant experience, discuss your options with your dentist. With one of the most innovative procedures in modern dentistry, you can have a beautiful smile that will last you a lifetime!



Source: http://www.1800dentist.com/what-do-changes-in-dental-implant-technology-mean-for-you/



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Wednesday, May 28, 2014

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Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Are diamond dental implants the future?


Scientists have discovered that diamonds on a much, much smaller scale than those used in jewellery could be used to promote bone growth and the durability of dental implants.

Instead of the types of diamonds used for rings and necklaces, researchers are proposing that nanodiamonds are used in dentistry. Nanodiamonds, which are created as byproducts of conventional mining and refining operations, are approximately four to five nanometers in diameter and are shaped like tiny soccer balls.

Nanodiamonds not only seem to provide stronger dental implants, they also appear to improve bone growth and combat osteonecrosis, a potentially debilitating disease in which bones break down due to reduced blood flow.

During typical bone repair operations dentists insert a sponge through invasive surgery to locally administer proteins that promote bone growth, such as bone morphogenic protein (a group of growth factors). New research suggests that using nanodiamonds to deliver these proteins has the potential to be more effective than the conventional approaches. The unique surface of the diamonds allows the proteins to be delivered more slowly, which may allow the affected area to be treated for a longer period of time.



The new discovery serves as a foundation for the future of nanotechnology in dentistry, orthopedics and other domains in medicine. Nanodiamonds have the potential to impact several other facets of oral, maxillofacial, and orthopedic surgery, as well as regenerative medicine.

The study was carried out at the UCLA School of Dentistry. The findings have been published in the Journal of Dental Research, in a paper titled “Multi-protein Delivery by Nanodiamonds Promotes Bone Formation”.



Read more: http://www.digitaljournal.com/life/health/are-diamond-dental-implants-the-future/article/384762



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Monday, May 26, 2014

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Sunday, May 25, 2014

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Friday, May 23, 2014

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ADA releases dental report to Congress

preventive_dentistry



While the U.S. healthcare debate has focused on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, other issues such as access to dental care were pushed aside. In response, the ADA created the Action for Dental Health movement to address barriers to dental healthcare. Now, after a year, the efforts and solutions offered by the action were gathered in a report to the U.S. Congress.



“Millions of Americans continue to face barriers to dental care, which is why the ADA launched Action for Dental Health.”

— Charles H. Norman III, DDS, president, ADA




To document the efforts being made through the program, the ADA released the first "Action for Dental Health: Report to Congress" during the ADA's annual Washington Leadership Conference, held this week in Washington, DC.



"Millions of Americans continue to face barriers to dental care, which is why the ADA launched Action for Dental Health," said ADA President Charles H. Norman III, DDS. "While we have accomplished much in the first year, there is still much to do. This 'Report to Congress' serves as a continued call to action for elected officials, health policy organizations, community leaders, and the dental community to come together to bridge the dental divide."



The ADA has set goals for Action for Dental Health, including the following:



Creating ER interception programs to reduce the burden on our nation's emergency rooms and improving dental health in 25 states by 2015, as well as 50 states and the District of Columbia by 2020.

Training at least 1,000 dentists to provide care in nursing homes, one of the most underserved populations, by 2020 and increasing the number of dentists serving on advisory boards or as dental directors of long-term care facilities.

Expanding programs that provide screening and treatment to help people in need connect with dentists for continuity of care and work to eliminate cavities in children younger than age 5 in the U.S. by 2020.

Improving the existing safety net and helping people connect with community resources and dentists who can provide care by increasing the number of states with active community dental heath coordinators (CDHCs) to 15 states by 2015. CDHCs provide dental health education and help people in underserved areas connect to community health resources and dentists for needed treatment. Currently, eight states have CDHCs.

Reducing the proportion of both adults and children younger than age 18 with untreated dental decay by 15% by 2020, exceeding the 10% Healthy People 2020 goal by 50%.

Increasing the proportion of low-income children who received any preventive dental services during the past year by 15% by 2020, exceeding the 10 % Healthy People 2020 goal by 50%.

The report also outlines four strategies and corresponding programs that are contributing to the success of the movement:



Providing care now. This includes hospital emergency room referral programs to connect people with severe dental pain to dentists who can provide needed treatment and expanding programs such as Give Kids A Smile, which currently provides dental services to approximately 400,000 underserved children at more than 1,500 events.

Strengthening and expanding the public/private safety net by fighting for increased dental health protections under Medicaid and helping more dentists work with community health centers and clinics.

Bringing disease prevention and education into communities through CDHCs.

Working to pass legislation at the federal and state levels that support Action for Dental Health initiatives. The Action for Dental Health Act (HR 4395) would provide grants to support programs such as expanding care for the elderly in nursing homes, encouraging dentists to contract with federally qualified health centers, increasing health protections and simplifying administration under Medicaid, expanding community water fluoridation, increasing the number of CDHCs, and strengthening collaborations with other health professionals and organizations.

To review detailed goals for Action for Dental Health, or to download the "Action for Dental Health: Report to Congress," visit the ADA website.



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Wednesday, May 21, 2014

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Good oral health all about choices

A HEALTHY mouth with strong beautiful teeth results in happy and productive citizens.



These were the words of Acting Commissioner Northern Alipate Bolalevu while officiating at the National Oral Health Week celebrations in Savusavu on Friday.



Mr Bolalevu said having such teeth meant people were healthy and well.



"There is a saying that goes, 'mouth and teeth are the windows to your soul' and so when someone smiles to you, you smile back and if you don't smile back to a smiling person, it can mean you are unhealthy or unwell," he said.



"The theme for this celebration basically emphasises the importance of your teeth which sparkles when you smile.



"Good oral health is all about our lifestyle, how we take care of our teeth, our lives and the choices we make."



Mr Bolalevu said there was a need for the community to work together in order to improve our oral health and overall wellbeing.



"Let's maintain good oral health and let's keep the North a healthy place for our children to play, learn and be productive citizens of."



Acting Divisional Dental Officer Northern Dr Nadeem Sattar said the Ministry of Health was committed to improving health services to people of Fiji.



The theme for the celebration is "Your Smile Matters".



Source: http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=268924



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from paul_fjeldsted http://paul-fjeldsted.livejournal.com/10606.html

Energy drinks, frequent meals mean bad oral health for athletes

woman-drinking-energy-drink

Faster, higher, stronger they may be, but Olympians wouldn’t win many medals in a contest of dental health. Behind their buffed physiques lurks a dentist’s nightmare.



“They have bodies of Adonis and a garbage mouth,” says Paul Piccininni. As dental director for the International Olympic Committee, the Toronto-based Piccininni is intimately familiar with the broken teeth, abscesses, decay and other dental issues that force hundreds of Olympians into dentists’ chairs at every Games.



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Among them Michael Jordan. At the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, where basketball’s superstar in the making was top scorer on the gold-medal-winning U.S. team, Jordan “had a significant dental problem that could have kept him out of a game,” Piccininni told the Associated Press in an interview at a conference on sports injuries.


The AP sent Jordan a text message to ask about the tooth issue, but he didn’t respond. Piccininni, bound by medical secrecy requirements, also wouldn’t give details.


“I know, but I shouldn’t say,” Piccininni said. “We’ve seen the best of the best.”


Honing their bodies through intense physical effort, athletes refuel with energy drinks, gels and bars and frequent meals, which teeth don’t like. Dehydration from sweating can also cut the production of saliva needed to regenerate tooth enamel.


Some rowers, for example, have “huge amounts of decay” because they’re training in boats for hours at a time, refuelling with teeth-eroding acidic, sugary drinks, said Tony Clough, who set up the dental clinic for Olympians at the 2012 London Games. Located in the athletes village, it had 30 dentists and 1,900 visits.


“We had patients coming in at 10:30 at night to have root canals and things like that,” said Clough.


A study that looked at 278 of the clinic’s visitors found 55 per cent had cavities and three-quarters diseased gums, mostly gingivitis but also 15 per cent with more serious periodontitis. One-quarter said dental problems affected their quality of life. The British Journal of Sports Medicine published the study last September.


“The oral health of athletes is worse than the oral health of the general population,” Piccininni said. “Considerably worse.”


An abscessed lower-left wisdom tooth threatened to keep British rower Alan Campbell from the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The infection spread to his shoulder, back and eventually settled in his right knee, requiring surgery two months before the games and ruining his training. He placed fifth in the Olympic single-sculls final and feels that he “certainly would have gone quicker” had the infected tooth not laid him so low, keeping him out of his boat for six weeks.


At the London Games four years later, Campbell won bronze. He’s certain that taking better care of his teeth has helped him row faster. He says he now flosses more, tends to drink water rather than sugary drinks, is “more aware of how important dental hygiene is to me and my body” and “if I thought I had any problems I would just have a tooth removed.


“I’m not saying someone with perfect teeth is going to beat Usain Bolt,” Campbell said in a phone interview with the AP. “But myself with good dental hygiene versus myself with bad dental hygiene: The version of me with good dental hygiene will be the one that comes out on top, I’m certain of it.”


Generally, teeth are most at risk among people ages 16 to 25, when they fly the family nest, perhaps party more and brush less, Clough said. That’s also the age group of many Olympians, which helps explain why so many have problem teeth.


But other suspected causes appear more athlete-specific. Frequent travel for competition or training can get in the way of regular dental check-ups. The wear of long flights might also be a factor, because Olympic dentists see “a huge big leap” in dental infections in the first week of the Games, said Clough.


Clenching teeth during strenuous effort, like lifting weights, can also grind them down.


“You could land the Space Shuttle” on some athletes’ teeth, said Piccininni. “Flat as a pancake. They have worn it down so much.”


Rowers breathe up to 80 times a minute in competition, and burn through 6,000 calories and eat five times a day, Campbell noted.


“A lot of pressure is going through the mouth,” he said. At the Athens Olympics in 2004, “I was grinding my teeth in my sleep and I was waking up with a very sore jaw and sore teeth as well and I had a special gum-shield to wear at night to sleep with.


“That was the stress. It was my first Olympics. I was quite young. I was 21. I think I was feeling the pressure,” he said.


The 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympic clinic will have eight dental chairs, X-ray machines, root-canal specialists and surgical facilities. There will be full-time dentists at hockey, rugby and basketball for any injuries. The clinic will also distribute mouth guards. They handed out 350 in London and 150 at the Sochi Winter Olympics this February, including to four Austrian ice-hockey players after a teammate lost a tooth in their first game.


Treatment is free.


Some Olympians “know they’ve had a dental problem for three weeks or a month or three months, but they know if they can hold off until they get to the Games they get it treated for free,” Piccininni said. “That’s fine. That’s one of the reasons that we’re there, is because athletes don’t have the financial resources.”



Source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health-and-fitness/health/energy-drinks-frequent-meals-mean-bad-oral-health-for-althletes/article18745714/



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Monday, May 19, 2014

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Your dental health

Dental_flossing_9344-CD There is an old saying about life. ‘No one,’ it goes, ‘gets out of here alive.’ But since we all have to go, we may as well do it with all of our teeth. For a normal adult, that means 32. They are molars, premolars, canine and bicuspid.



But the truth – the painful truth for millions of Americans – is that too many of us are not getting out of here with a full allotment of teeth. And while leaving without a full set is bad, it need not be that way. But too many of us, unfortunately, are the problem in this regrettable scenario. We are neglecting our teeth and it is killing us – figuratively and, sometimes, literally!



Of the approximately ten thousand patients who were treated last year at Denver’s Clinica Family Health Services, “almost all of them” had oral health issues that went beyond routine, says Clinica Vice President of Dental Services, Dr. An Nguyen.



“We definitely see patients who have gone without care for too long,” says Nguyen. Few Clinica patients are dropping in for routine checkups and cleanings. “By the time they see us, they’re looking at tertiary care.” That is when a patient requires extractions, has serious gum disease or both.



In Colorado and across the nation, we are failing – some of us quite miserably – at basic dental health. We are not only suffering unnecessary physical pain because of simple neglect of our teeth but also socially because of the aesthetics, the cosmetics of bad teeth. And one of the major reasons is the simple fear of the dentist.



The fear most people have of visiting a dentist is two-pronged says Denver dentist, Dr. Eloisa Lovato, owner of Comfort Dental in Jefferson County. “For most people it’s based on money; fear of cost, fear of pain.” Lovato also says there a psychological component that is hard – impossible for many – to overcome. “Many people feel they don’t have the same control with a dentist as they have when they’re sitting with a doctor or in a doctor’s office. They just feel very vulnerable.”



But the fear people have of dentists, says Lovato, is built up over a lifetime of misconception. “The lion of the mind is sometimes more powerful than the lion of the jungle.” Today a visit to a dentist can actually be pain-free, says the Denver native. “That’s why I like where I’m at because we can control the costs and the fear.” Lovato says she also likes to talk with her patients because it helps them overcome some of their anxiety.



Poor dental hygiene is an issue that spans every ethnic and socio-economic class. “People have priorities and oral health isn’t necessarily one of them,” says Dr. Tyrone Rodriguez, President of the Hispanic Dental Association, an organization that represents more than 2,500 Hispanic dentists in the United States and Puerto Rico. But, he says, a dentist becomes a person’s highest priority “when their situation becomes complex.” And when they reach this point, “discomfort and fear are quickly overcome.” Or, he says, at least managed.



Lack of knowledge about dental health often becomes generational. Parents who ignore their own basic dental maintenance are also likely to ignore that of their children. “Parents don’t see anything to worry about if a child has a cavity,” says Rodriguez, a pediatric dentist. A young child nursing a cavity is ignored with the rationalization that “it’s only a baby tooth.” But a baby tooth is just as important as a permanent one. Rodriguez says good dental health begins in childhood.



Rodriguez says it is never too early to instill good habits. Instead of putting a baby to bed with a bottle of milk, he says, substitute it with water. Milk digests as glucose – sugar. Nobody needs more sugar. Also begin dental visits around age two to three.



Poor dental health comes with a steep price and no one pays more for this unnecessary neglect than children. Those in poor families pay the most. According to the Centers for Disease Control, kids from lower-income families are two times more likely to have tooth decay than those from higher-income families.



The cost of poor dental health care in the U.S. is also staggering. According to Oral Health America, children with a dental issue accounted for more than 51 million missed school hours in 2013. Adults with similar problems were off the clock to a tune of 164 million hours in the same year.



“It is a silent epidemic,” says Rodriguez. “The impact it has on education, achievement and advancement is immense. You can’t expect a child to be engaged if they’re in pain and discomfort.”



Another thing keeping people away from the dentist is lack of dental insurance. More than 130 million adults and children have none. And while many cheer the fact that millions of Americans who had no health care will now be getting it, Congress failed to include dental health in the Affordable Care Act. “It is one of our challenges,” says Rodriguez. Policy makers, he says, need to know that dental health is tied to bigger health issues.



Numerous studies have shown that oral health is like the canary in the coal mine. Decades ago, canaries were released into mines to determine if the air was breathable. If they died, it meant bad air. Conversely, bad oral health can be a harbinger of other health issues.



Heart specialists have for years believed that clogged arteries and stroke “may be linked to inflammation and infections that oral bacteria can cause.” Gum disease has been linked to premature birth and low birth weight. It is also more frequent in people with diabetes. Dentists are also among the first to see the initial signs of oral cancer. A check for oral cancer is now a routine a part of each visit.



Rodriguez says some dental health issues among immigrant children can be traced to something as simple as water. Because water in their countries is often bad, they drink bottled water which contains no fluoride, an agent long believed to fight tooth decay. A lack of fluoride has accelerated tooth decay.



Another barrier keeping thousands from visiting a dentist is language. Many Latinos, especially immigrants, hesitate to see a dentist because they cannot communicate their issues. There is also something else keeping immigrants and their children away from dentists, says Rodriguez, whose parents also immigrants.



“A lot of immigrant parents are reluctant to sign up for dental care because they are afraid their information may be shared with authorities,” he says. “They don’t want to be deported and don’t want their family split up with a deportation.” The government says this would not happen but, nonetheless, it is a fear has not gone away.



Rodriguez says he would like the media to play a role in educating people on good dental health. In addition to an Ad Council campaign on dental health that is now running and urging regular brushing and flossing he would also like to see a dramatic increase in the number of Latino dentists.



“There are not enough,” he says flatly. The most recent census says that the U.S. Latino population is the fastest growing ethnic minority in the country. The same cannot be said for the Latino dentist population. “You’re looking at a (Latino dental) population of seven to eight thousand trying to help a population of 50 million.”



Rodriguez says he would like to see more programs like the kind that allowed him to become a dentist. It forgave part of his student loan in exchange for working in an impoverished or designated community. A program like this could make the difference between a community – rural or urban – having a dentist or having none.



Source: http://www.lavozcolorado.com/detail.php?id=7543



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Tuesday, May 13, 2014

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from paul_fjeldsted http://paul-fjeldsted.livejournal.com/8493.html

Low Vitamin D Levels During Pregnancy Linked To Toddler's Cavities

mothers-vitamin-d-levels-causes-toddlers-cavities A mother's low levels of vitamin D is a cause of dental cavities in young children. But theoretical claims about the vitamin playing a role in the development of autism spectrum disorder lack the same clear evidence.



A new study underscores the importance of vitamin D supplements for pregnant and nursing mothers to prevent conditions from diabetes and respiratory infection to — possibly — autism spectrum disorder (ASD).



Researchers at the University of Manitoba in Canada confirmed this month that low levels of vitamin D in mothers and babies leads to more cavities in the child. "Prevention efforts should begin during pregnancy by bolstering maternal nutrition, either through improved dietary intake or supplementation with vitamin D," the researchers said in a statement.



In the study, the Canadian team followed 207 young pregnant women with an average age of 19, many of whom representing lower socioeconomic groups in the country. The researchers interviewed participants and took blood samples, later examining 134 babies at the age of 16 months. A third of the study participants had low levels of vitamin D while 26 to 36 percent of toddlers had cavities, the researchers reported Tuesday in the journal Pediatrics.



As suspected, children born to women with lower levels of vitamin D during pregnancy were more likely to develop cavities than others. However, defects in tooth enamel in children also led to cavities, the researchers said.



William B. Grant of the Sunlight, Nutrition and Health Research Center says the benefits of proper prenatal nutrition are numerous. "All pregnant and nursing women need to take 4000 to 5000 [International Units per day] of vitamin D3,” he told Reuters. “There are many benefits for pregnancy outcomes including reduced risk of gestational diabetes, respiratory and other infections, premature delivery, pre-eclampsia, adverse effects on the fetus such as birth defects including very possibly autism.”



In recent years, medical scientists have found increasing evidence that vitamin D might play a role in the development of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), according to John Cannell, a research physician who describes himself as “mildly autistic” and absolutely obsessed with vitamin D. The founder of the Vitamin D Council, the investigator continues to research a possible link between a deficiency of the vitamin and development of the condition.



“For the last year, I have been helping parents of autistic children correct their child’s vitamin D deficiency,” Cannell wrote in January in Life Extension Magazine. In tentative conclusions he called preliminary and unscientific, the researcher reported that while half of the children in the study with ASD were unaffected by the vitamin D regimen, the other half experienced either dramatic or significant improvements in their symptoms.



“It’s clear that various reasonable mechanisms exist for how vitamin D could help children with autism,” Cannell says. “Be it via anti-inflammatory actions, anti-autoimmune activities, upregulation ofneurotrophins, or stimulation of antioxidant pathways, adequate doses of vitamin D (enough to obtain natural blood levels of 50-80 ng/mL of 25-hyroxyvitamin D) may be a potential treatment for some cases of autism.”



Yet such claims remain entirely theoretical at this point, supported by a recent study from Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute as well as at least one Aspie with a fixation on vitamin D. But at the very least, science now understands the role vitamin D plays in pediatric dental cavities.







Source: Schroth RJ, Lavelle C, Tate R. Prenatal Vitamin D And Dental Caries In Infants. Pediatrics. 2014.



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Monday, May 12, 2014

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Giving Meaning to Marathons

st-jude-hopeline-050914-steve-blume-main-image

Steve Blume with his son, Jason, and his daughter, Shelley, who all raised money as St. Jude Heroes.



Steve Blume is passionate about two things: running and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. He has combined these passions into action that has had a real impact on his fellow running enthusiasts and the children of St. Jude.





Blume, 59, of Brentwood, Tennessee, leads running groups that train for the St. Jude Country Music Marathon in Nashville and the St. Jude Memphis Marathon Weekend. Over the last two years, Blume and his groups of St. Jude Heroes have raised almost $70,000 for St. Jude. “I live this, and I breathe it,” he said.

As charity athletes, St. Jude Heroes raise funds for St. Jude through pledges and donations while preparing to compete. Blume even started a blog to offer fundraising tips to fellow St. Jude Heroes at heroeshelper.blogspot.com.

This athlete-turned-fundraiser came to running late in life. A 6’4” defensive tackle for Memphis State University in the 1970s, Blume was stunned when his doctor in 2006 classified him as obese. He entered a local weight-loss contest, changed his diet and began running on the treadmill, which helped him to lose more than 60 pounds.

Spurred on by these results, Blume continued running and completed his first marathon the following year in Nashville. After multiple half marathons, he decided in 2011 to run another marathon and selected the St. Jude Memphis Marathon without knowing much about the hospital.



st-jude-hopeline-050914-steve-blume-secondary-image "To go back to Memphis where I played football as a lineman in the 1970s and to finish a full marathon in the top 25 percent at my age would be kind of a statement for me,” he said. Instead, the marathon made a statement to him. “At most races when you run people are yelling, ‘Come on, you can do it.’ At St. Jude they were yelling ‘Thank you.’ Even though I wasn’t a Hero, I felt involved; I felt I was doing something.”

Blume decided to really make a difference and started raising funds as a St. Jude Hero, as well as training groups to run both marathons. His training sessions are free as long as group participants are running as St. Jude Heroes or donating to a St. Jude Hero. “If you are in my group, at water stops you are going to learn about St. Jude and what the hospital does and what the kids do,” Blume said.

“My commitment to St. Jude started with that first race, but it has strengthened so much since then. If you dig a little, you learn more about St. Jude and that builds your belief system.”

If you are interested in being a St. Jude Hero, sign up now for the St. Jude Memphis Marathon® Weekend.



Source: http://www.stjude.org.ve/stjude/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=1999a14a2ba65410VgnVCM100000290115acRCRD



from paul_fjeldsted http://paul-fjeldsted.livejournal.com/7815.html

Funding Reopens Dental Services To Low-income Patients

Millions of low-income Californians on Thursday regained many of the dental services they lost five years ago during state budget cuts that virtually eliminated non-emergency dental benefits for adults.



When the state's fiscal health improved, Gov. Jerry Brown last year agreed to resume funding Medi-Cal dental benefits, known as Denti-Cal.



"We are so thrilled about ... the restoration. All of the adults who had Medi-Cal will finally be able to get teeth fixed instead of getting them pulled," said Elizabeth Landsberg, director of legislative policy for the Western Center on Law and Poverty.



The Legislature stopped short of providing the $130 million needed to fully restore the benefits. Instead, the state will spend $93.9 million over two years for such services as routine cleanings and exams, X-rays, root canals for the front teeth and full dentures. But partial dentures, root canals in the back teeth and some other procedures won't be covered.



Bay Area dentists who cover Medi-Cal patients consider it a good start. They said the last few years took a huge toll on their patients, who couldn't get the kind of routine care, fillings and other services that could save their teeth.



"The only option was to extract teeth," said Dr. Ariane Terlet, chief dental officer of La Clinica de la Raza, which has clinics in Alameda, Contra Costa and Solano counties.



The 2009 decision to cut the dental care program spared pregnant women and those in long-term care. Emergency dental services also remained intact, as well as coverage for children.



Some clinics continued to see Medi-Cal patients even without reimbursement, although an increasing number of visits had to be classified as emergencies due to infections, decaying teeth and other serious mouth problems.



"We got them out of pain. We managed what we could for them," said Dr. Russ Woodson, quality assurance coordinator at the University of the Pacific's Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry in San Francisco and regional screening consultant for the Denti-Cal program.



At Alameda Health System's Highland Hospital in Oakland, the number of emergency-department visits for dental problems rose from 2,425 in 2007 to a peak of 4,710 in 2011.



The hospital has seen a 50 percent increase in oral cancer diagnoses in just the past year, said Dr. Tony Mock, who directs the dental clinic and serves as chief of general dentistry for the county health system.



Mock and other health advocates worry about having enough dentists to take care of both longtime Medi-Cal patients who haven't had dental services for five years and nearly 2 million patients who became eligible for Medi-Cal this year through the expansion of the federal Affordable Care Act.



The Oakland clinic is adding more staff and starting a new residency program, Mock said, but it still may not be enough.



Medi-Cal patients like Jenine Smith are grateful to have someplace to go for dental care.



"I'm glad they're restoring them," Smith said. "There are a lot of us Baby Boomers here, and we need this."



The 62-year-old Oakland woman's surgeon referred her to Highland's dental clinic to make sure she didn't have any infections or other dental problems that could cause bacteria to enter her bloodstream and complicate a scheduled knee replacement surgery.



Turns out Smith had two abscesses and will need two back teeth removed and a filling replaced before her surgery this month.



Source: http://www.sfgate.com/health/article/Funding-reopens-dental-services-to-low-income-5446889.php



Visit us: http://www.michelsfamilydental.com/



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Thursday, May 1, 2014

Access to dental care, opportunity to care

If you’re reading this, you no doubt have a healthy smile. After all, we are in the smile business. With this in mind, picture this — it’s dark, in the wee hours of the morning, and you’re standing in line with hundreds of other people who, just like you, are waiting for dental treatment. Maybe it’s for a cleaning, an overdue filling, or a more complicated procedure. What we take for granted as dental professionals every day is a struggle for hundreds of thousands of people nationwide.



Dental care is either unavailable or an unaffordable luxury for many adults from coast to coast. It’s common these days to find adults with severe pain, discomfort, and embarrassment due to poor oral health. A pretty good safety net for children’s dental needs has been in place for quite some time, but in recent years we’ve seen situations where even children have fallen through the cracks or even died due to limited access to proper dental care. By now I’m sure many of you have heard of the growing number of Missions of Mercy (MOM) Projects (or Dental Access Days [DAD] if you’re from South Carolina) that are becoming more prevalent to address this growing epidemic. These initiatives are serving some very large needs in our communities.



What you may not realize is that it is no longer just the “indigent” that are seeking dental care. Many of the patients coming to these events have had very good dental care in the past, but due to changes in the economy, such as downsizing of companies and loss of employment, they’ve lost their dental benefits. I’ve been on the steering committee for the South Carolina Dental Association (SCDA) DAD Project since its inception more than six years ago, and it’s a very humbling experience to speak with people who can no longer afford the care that they once had, leaving DAD as their only option. It did not matter what the backgrounds of these people were, where they came from, or what they did for a living. Everyone who came through was extremely grateful they were treated with dignity and respect and were not judged for seeking care in this setting. It’s not uncommon to have individuals come in for care one day, and then return the following day to volunteer and “pay it forward.”

In this age of hustle and bustle, it’s easy to get caught up in the daily cycle of getting up, going to work, shuttling children, making dinner, and repeating it all over, day after day. We tend to not look at the needs outside of our own little world, not because we don’t care, but because too often we’re too busy or tired.

It can be daunting to volunteer for an event with the magnitude of access to care projects, especially if you’ve never participated in one. As we near the halfway mark of the calendar year, a time that is typically not thought of as the “Season of Giving,” let me encourage you not to wait until the end of the year. Give of your time and talents now! Your community needs you!

Check with your state dental association for opportunities. As a dental assistant, you may be asked to help set up for the event, triage patients, take radiographs, sterilize instruments, register patients, check patients out, or assist a doctor chairside. It’s not easy to assist a dentist you may not know, or to use materials you’re not familiar with, but in my experience, dental assistants always rise to the occasion. Share the information with your doctor and teammates, and register the entire office to attend as a group. What a great way to bond.

MOM and DAD Projects are not the only way for you to be able to share your time and talents in your community. Check with community-run clinics, and don’t forget about Give Kids A Smile. These events are always looking for volunteers and would be eternally grateful for an extra pair of hands.

If you ask anyone who has taken the opportunity to volunteer at any of these events, they will tell you they got much more from participating than what they gave. Were volunteers mentally and physically exhausted by the end of the day or weekend? Absolutely! Would they do it again? Definitely! The opportunity to give the gift of a smile to those in the greatest of need, with only a heartfelt handshake or hug as payment, is really the greatest gift of all.



Source: http://www.dentistryiq.com/articles/2014/04/access-to-dental-care-opportunity-to-care.html



Visit us: http://www.michelsfamilydental.com/



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