COVID 19 and Special Care Dentistry: A Narrative Review

Ashwika Datey (1) , Soumya Singhai (2) , Gargi Nimbulkar (3) , Kumar Gaurav Chhabra (4) , Amit Reche (5)
(1) Sharad Pawar Dental College and Hospital, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences (Deemed to be University), Sawangi (Meghe), Wardha - 442001, Maharashtra, India, India ,
(2) Sharad Pawar Dental College and Hospital, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences (Deemed to be University), Sawangi (Meghe), Wardha - 442001, Maharashtra, India, India ,
(3) Department of Public Health Dentistry, Sharad Pawar Dental College and Hospital, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences (Deemed to be University), Sawangi (Meghe), Wardha - 442001, Maharashtra, India, India ,
(4) Department of Public Health Dentistry, Sharad Pawar Dental College and Hospital, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences (Deemed to be University), Sawangi (Meghe), Wardha - 442001, Maharashtra, India, India ,
(5) Department of Public Health Dentistry, Sharad Pawar Dental College and Hospital, Datta Meghe Institute of Medical Sciences (Deemed to be University), Sawangi (Meghe), Wardha - 442001, Maharashtra, India, India

Abstract

The COVID 19 outbreak has been declared a pandemic by the world health organisation. The healthcare sector was overburdened and overstretched with the number of patient increasing and requiring health services. The worst-hit population always are the people with special needs, whether it is children, pregnant females or the geriatric population. The need for the emergency kind of health services was so inflated that the other special population which required them equally as those patients with the COVID 19 suffered a lot. Dentistry was not an exception, and even that is also one of the important components of the health care delivery system and people requiring oral health care needs were also more. Those undergoing dental treatments would not have completed the treatment, and this would have resulted in various complications. In this situation, some dental emergency guidelines have been released by Centres for Disease Control (CDC) for the urgent dental care those requiring special care dentistry during the COVID 19 pandemic. Children with special care needs were considered more vulnerable to oral diseases; hence priority should have been given to them for dental treatments moreover in the future also more aggressive preventive measures should be taken in order to maintain oral hygiene and prevent many oral diseases. Guardians/caregivers should be made aware and motivated to maintain the oral health of children with special health care needs. This review mainly focuses on the prevention and management of oral diseases in children's with special care needs.

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Authors

Ashwika Datey
Soumya Singhai
Gargi Nimbulkar
garginimbulkar@gmail.com (Primary Contact)
Kumar Gaurav Chhabra
Amit Reche
Ashwika Datey, Soumya Singhai, Gargi Nimbulkar, Kumar Gaurav Chhabra, & Amit Reche. (2020). COVID 19 and Special Care Dentistry: A Narrative Review. International Journal of Research in Pharmaceutical Sciences, 11((SPL 1), 1473–1476. Retrieved from https://ijrps.com/home/article/view/1957

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