Teledental Consultations Using a Messaging Application during the COVID-19 Pandemic: Experience from a Singapore COVID-19 Community Care Facility

Introduction During the ‘Circuit Breaker’ period of the COVID-19 pandemic in Singapore from April to June 2020, governmental policies restricted the practice of dentistry nationwide to the provision of emergency treatment only, regardless of the patient’s COVID status. As such, teledentistry was use...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gabriel Tse Feng Chong
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2022-06-01
Series:Proceedings of Singapore Healthcare
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20101058211041411
Description
Summary:Introduction During the ‘Circuit Breaker’ period of the COVID-19 pandemic in Singapore from April to June 2020, governmental policies restricted the practice of dentistry nationwide to the provision of emergency treatment only, regardless of the patient’s COVID status. As such, teledentistry was used as an alternative means to continue providing some form of dental care to COVID-19–positive patients who were admitted to a COVID-19 Community Care Facility. Description The patients were physically triaged by physicians who would send clinical photos to the author via a messaging application, who would in turn triage the patients and assess if they required referral for emergency dental treatment. For patients who did not meet the criteria for referral, the author would advise the physicians on the subsequent management plan which included, but was not limited to, the provision of symptomatic relief. Conclusions This article shows the feasibility of undertaking teledental consultations using clinical photos transmitted via a messaging application. The practical implication is a reduced barrier for patients and healthcare professionals to access teledentistry, without having to resort to sophisticated equipment. Hopefully, this will translate into the continued provision of some form of dental care to patients during the ongoing pandemic as opposed to no care at all.
ISSN:2059-2329