Wisconsin
Oral Health Program
Background
The mission of the Oral Health Program is to promote and improve oral
health for the benefit of all Wisconsin citizens. This is accomplished
through policy development, technical assistance, needs assessment,
training, education, and through the planning, implementation and
evaluation of preventive oral health programs.
Oral health is essential to the general health and well-being of all
Wisconsin residents and can be achieved by all residents. The word oral
refers to the mouth. The mouth includes not only the teeth and gums (gingiva)
and their supporting tissues, but also the hard and soft palate, the
mucosal lining of the mouth and throat, the tongue, the lips, the salivary
glands, the chewing muscles, and the upper and lower jaws. Equally
important are the branches of the nervous, immune, and vascular systems
that animate, protect, and nourish the oral tissues, as well as provide
connections to the brain and the rest of the body.
Oral health means much more than healthy teeth. It means being free of
chronic oral-facial pain conditions, oral and pharyngeal (throat) cancers,
oral soft tissue lesions, birth defects such as cleft lip and palate, and
scores of other diseases and disorders.
Oral health is integral to general health. You cannot be healthy
without oral health. Oral health and general health should not be
interpreted as separate entities.
Safe and effective disease prevention measures exist that everyone can
adopt to improve oral health and prevent disease. These measures include
daily oral hygiene procedures and other lifestyle behaviors, community
programs such as community water fluoridation and tobacco cessation
programs, and provider-based interventions such as the placement of dental
sealants and examinations for common oral and pharyngeal cancers.
General health risk factors, such as tobacco use and poor dietary
practices, also affect oral and craniofacial health. The evidence for an
association between tobacco use and oral diseases has been clearly
identified.
There are profound and consequential oral health disparities within the
population. Disparities for various oral conditions may relate to income,
age, sex, race, or ethnicity, or medical status.
Background Information |
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Programs
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Last Revised: January 04, 2005
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