The compartmentalization involved in viewing the mouth separately from the rest of the body must cease because oral health affects general health by causing considerable pain and suffering and by changing what people eat, their speech and their quality of life and well-being. Oral health also has an effect on other chronic diseases (1). Because of the failure to tackle social and material de-terminants and incorporate oral health into general health promotion, millions suffer intractable toothache and poor quality of life and end up with few teeth.Health policies should be reori-ented to incorporate oral health using sociodental approaches to assessing needs and the common risk factor approach for health promotion (1, 2). Oral diseases are the most common of the chronic diseases and are important public health problems because of their prevalence, their impact on individuals and society, and the expense of their treatment. The determinants of oral diseases are known — they are the risk factors common to a number of chronic diseases: diet and dirt (hygiene), smok-ing, alcohol, risky behaviours causing injuries, and stress — and effective public health methods are available to prevent oral diseases.In some countries, oral diseases are the fourth most expensive diseases to treat. Treating caries, estimated at US$ 3513 per 1000 children, would exceed the total health budget for children of most low-income countries (3). The situation for adults in developing coun-tries is worse, as they suffer from the accumulation of untreated oral diseases. There are few efficient dental care sys-tems to cope with their problems, and where there are, the cost is beyond most people’s means. Millions with untreated caries have cavities and suppuration, yet planners continue to overlook oral dis-eases, despite their significant impact on cost and quality of life. This oversight will lead to more decay and expensive, ineffective clinical interventions.
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