PRODUCTION - 11 September 2023, Lower Saxony, Hanover: A pediatric dentist examines a three-year-old child in a pediatric dental practice. The Association of Statutory Health Insurance Dentists of Lower Saxony (KZVN), the Lower Saxony Chamber of Dentists (ZKN), Dentists for Lower Saxony (ZfN) and the Free Association of German Dentists (FVDZ) are calling for protests at the Lower Saxony state parliament due to the federal government's current austerity legislation. The associations consider dental care in Lower Saxony to be endangered by the measures. Photo: Julian Stratenschulte/dpa (Photo by Julian Stratenschulte/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Do you need a dentist visit every 6 months? That filling? The data is weak

The field of dentistry is lagging on adopting evidence-based care and, as such, is rife with overdiagnoses and overtreatments that may align more with the economic pressures of keeping a dental practice afloat than what care patients actually need. At least, that’s according to a trio of health and dental researchers from Brazil and the United Kingdom, led by epidemiologist and dentist Paulo Nadanovsky, of the University of the State of Rio de Janeiro.

In a viewpoint published Monday in JAMA Internal Medicine, the researchers point out that many common—nearly unquestioned—practices in dentistry aren’t backed up by solid data. That includes the typical recommendation that everyone should get a dental check-up every six months. The researchers note that two large clinical trials failed to find a benefit of six-month check-ups compared with longer intervals that were up to two years.

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