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The Dentist’s Dirty Secret
Jack F. Conley, DDS
Copyright 2000 Journal of the California Dental Association
"Someone has said it is like sharing spit."
Thus began the latest TV newsmagazine expose aimed more at alarming
the public than educating them to the true status of a problem that dentistry
has been dealing with for some time now. In mid-February, the ABC News
"20/20" story titled "The Dentist’s Dirty Secret" rewrote the how-to manual
on pulling out all of the emotion-filled stops to grab the attention of
the viewer. Only time will tell how effective their effort was in damaging
the image of the dental profession. Lack of media attention immediately
after the broadcast suggests that it may have failed to grab the public
emotion it was seeking.
Make no mistake, dentistry does have a problem that requires closure,
whether that be in the form of better dental unit waterline design or
more practical procedures to ensure compliance with the 200 cfu/ml water
standard that was set as a goal by the American Dental Association in
1995. However, network television continues to take great liberties in
creating a sensational story.
For example, veteran TV news journalist Barbara Walters initiated the
piece in a tone laced with disgust, "We did comparison tests, dental water
vs. toilet water. What we found is enough to make you sick!" A researcher
is shown going into a men’s restroom and scooping water from a toilet
and a urinal. Fortunately, it appeared that both vessels were clean and
had been flushed. Other emotion-filled narrative included a description
of water from the syringe in the dental office as being "so slimy, so
dirty, it’s been compared to pond scum." And finally, "Most dentists are
still squirting bacteria-filled water into their patients’ mouths."
Our concern is the emotion-grabbing manner in which it was presented.
As might be expected, similar to past media presentations on dental issues,
the tone was decidedly anti-dentistry. The emphasis was on "most" dentists
doing nothing to prevent the problem with little discussion devoted to
procedures or devices that would decrease the dangers of the biofilm.
We wonder why positive information on steps that dentists are now taking
to minimize the biofilm hazard cannot be shared with viewers in an educational
manner? Could it be that positive information was lost at the editing
console?
In an ADA News release prior to the airing of the 20/20 program,
it was announced that noted microbiologist John Molinari, PhD, who is
the ADA spokesperson on dental unit water, had been interviewed for 40
minutes in preparation for a story that was timed at approximately 12
1/2 minutes. Less than 1 1/2 minutes of the Molinari interview was aired,
much of it focusing on findings that immunocompromised patients may be
the only ones at risk for infection from the organisms found in the dental
office waterlines. One can only suspect that the other 38 1/2 minutes
of that interview discussed the important things that well-meaning dentists
are doing to reduce the risk of biofilms, such as flushing of water lines,
sterilization of syringe tips or use of disposable syringe tips, use of
suck-back prevention devices, and sterilization of handpieces. Use of
sterile water or saline in surgical procedures was addressed, but management
of air-water syringes and handpieces in the general dental office was
ignored, leaving the viewer with the distinct impression that in most
general offices, "dentists are still squirting bacteria-filled water into
their patients’ mouths" without any effort to reduce or remove the risk.
Irrespective of the impact of this recent news spectacular on dentistry
or its image, it is clear that dentistry does have a problem until research,
development, and leadership place some clear choices in front of the profession
for adoption. Until that happens, dentists are left to scramble individually
to address ADA, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Dental
Board of California (formerly the Board of Dental Examiners) recommendations
and infection control guidelines by purchasing costly sterile water systems
or devices or by utilizing unproven filters or water cleansing products
such as antimicrobials. Adding to the general practitioner’s dilemma,
the literature reveals scientific data such as that in the February 2000
issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association, "Dental
Unit Waterline Antimicrobial Agents’ Effect on Dentin Bond Strength,"
which concluded that "Dental unit waterline antimicrobial agents may adversely
affect dentin bonding strength."
The major problem we see in this scenario is that progress toward a possible
and practical universal solution has been incredibly slow, given its somewhat
lengthy history. Now that "The Dentist’s Dirty Secret" has been splashed
across TV screens nationwide, it is hoped that the pace toward a complete
solution of this problem will increase with deliberation.
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