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Constructing public oral health policies in Brazil: issues for reflection

Abstract

This paper addresses the construction of public oral health policies in Brazil by reviewing the available literature. It includes a discussion of the social responses given by the Brazilian State to oral health policies and the relationship of these responses with the ideological oral health movements that have developed globally, and that have specifically influenced oral health policies in Brazil. The influence of these movements has affected a series of hegemonic practices originating from both Market Dentistry and Preventive and Social Dentistry in Brazil. Among the state activities that have been set into motion, the following stand out: the drafting of a law to regulate the fluoridation of the public water supply, and the fluoridation of commercial toothpaste in Brazil; epidemiological surveys to analyze the status of the Brazilian population's oral health; the inclusion of oral health in the Family Health Strategy (Estratégia de Saúde da Família - ESF); the drawing up of the National Oral Health Policy, Smiling Brazil (Brasil Sorridente). From the literature consulted, the progressive expansion of state intervention in oral health policies is observed. However, there remains a preponderance of hegemonic "dental" practices reproduced in the Unified Public Health Service (Sistema Único de Saúde - SUS) and the Family Health Strategy.

Oral Health; Health Policy; Dental Care


ORIGINAL ARTICLES

ORAL HEALTH

Constructing public oral health policies in Brazil: issues for reflection* * Paper presented at the "Oral Health Under an Integrality Perspective" International Symposium, held at the 17 th Congress of the Brazilian Association for Oral Health Promotion (ABOPREV), May 31 to June 2, 2012, Salvador, BA, Brazil. Declaration of Interests: The author certifies that she has no commercial or associative interest that represents a conflict of interest in connection with the manuscript.

Catharina Leite Matos Soares

Instituto de Saúde Coletiva, Univ Federal da Bahia - UFBA, Salvador, BA, Brazil

Corresponding author Corresponding Author: Catharina Leite Matos Soares E-mail: catharinamatos@gmail.com

ABSTRACT

This paper addresses the construction of public oral health policies in Brazil by reviewing the available literature. It includes a discussion of the social responses given by the Brazilian State to oral health policies and the relationship of these responses with the ideological oral health movements that have developed globally, and that have specifically influenced oral health policies in Brazil. The influence of these movements has affected a series of hegemonic practices originating from both Market Dentistry and Preventive and Social Dentistry in Brazil. Among the state activities that have been set into motion, the following stand out: the drafting of a law to regulate the fluoridation of the public water supply, and the fluoridation of commercial toothpaste in Brazil; epidemiological surveys to analyze the status of the Brazilian population's oral health; the inclusion of oral health in the Family Health Strategy (Estratégia de Saúde da Família - ESF); the drawing up of the National Oral Health Policy, Smiling Brazil (Brasil Sorridente). From the literature consulted, the progressive expansion of state intervention in oral health policies is observed. However, there remains a preponderance of hegemonic "dental" practices reproduced in the Unified Public Health Service (Sistema Único de Saúde - SUS) and the Family Health Strategy.

Descriptors: Oral Health; Health Policy; Dental Care.

Introduction

The literature contains different approaches to studying health policies. These involve an understanding of how a body such as the State responds to the health problems and needs of a population at different historical times, responses that are not necessarily of action, but may also be of omission, and illustrate the degree of commitment to specific social issues in the country. These approaches may also be understood as a set of intentions, principles and guidelines for a health issue that shapes the action plans and policies appearing in official documents. Moreover, they involve the distribution, relationships, struggles, nature and structure of power within the health sector.1

Viana's2 study in the field of dentistry was pioneering, in that it addressed oral health policies in Brazil from the perspective of state responses.

Other approaches deal with the policy cycle, which covers the phases in which a public policy is shaped, from the inclusion of an issue on an agenda, through the drawing up and implementation processes, to ultimate policy evaluation.3,4

A significant increase in scientific production regarding public oral health policies occurred simultaneously with the development of the Brazilian Health Reform (Reforma Sanitária Brasileira - RSB), the establishment of the Unified Public Health Service (Sistema Único de Saúde - SUS), and the incorporation of oral health into this system. This can be evidenced by consulting the available databases, considering that approximately 1,000 titles were found in the databases we consulted. These studies address issues from decentralization to the incorporation of oral health into SUS,5 with a striking number of studies dealing with the incorporation of oral health into the Family Health Strategy (Estratégia de Saúde da Família - ESF).6-11

This phenomenon is not without reason, insofar as the incorporation of the Oral Health Team (Equipe de Saúde Bucal - ESB) into the Family Health Strategy aimed at reorganizing dental care through primary health care—that occupies a privileged place at the local level—supported by financial incentives available for this purpose,12 and strengthened by the drawing up of a specific policy in 2004 known as Smiling Brazil (Brasil Sorridente),13 which itself has been the target of studies at the local level.14

It is worth emphasizing that these policies are the product of an historical construction, and that the State and Brazilian society are structural components of this construction. This explains why these policies were established in one particular way and not another. In this sense, it is worthwhile to include some reflections that were made in a study on the Brazilian Health Reform regarding the State and Society in Brazil. The author reports that policies were drawn up and implemented by an authoritarian, bureaucratic and patrimonialist State, and a society witnessing a passive revolution, in which solutions generally came "from above," without the participation of the Brazilian people. However, like all dialectic processes, this one was textured by contradictions and specific historical moments, which gave rise to more progressive movements, like SUS, in which organized civil society played a central role.15

These initial considerations must be borne in mind to understand both the relevance of the the oral health policy issue in Brazil and the foundations on which these policies are based, which is this article's subject of discussion. The article reviews the available literature to outline the main ideological movements in global oral health, which have influenced Brazil, and to relate them to Brazil's state responses to oral health throughout the 20th and early 21st centuries, highlighting the National Oral Health Policy (Política Nacional de Saúde Bucal - PNSB), Smiling Brazil, drawn up in 2004.

Discussion

Ideological movements in oral health: implications for oral health policies in Brazil

The concepts of ideology and ideological movements are addressed by Arouca.16 Ideology encompasses both the system of ideas and representations that dominate the spirit of man or of a social group, and ideological practices, such as those activities carried out in order to transform any given ideology into another ideology. Thus, ideological movements are defined as a series of ideological practices, and an ideological movement represents a series of activities aimed at transforming one "global vision" into a new "global vision." There is a coherent body of ideas that have a dual function:

  • on one hand, that of criticizing any ideology that seeks to replace itself, and,

  • on the other, that of asserting the effectiveness of the solution to the issues presented, evidencing the emergence of new prospects that the prior movement was unable to fulfill.

Of the movements addressing ideas that have influenced the dental field, private dentistry—also known as market dentistry—is one that developed prominently in Brazil. Its expansion was promoted by the Brazilian capitalist state, which incorporated it into the public service system through social security.17

A systematic review of both the national and international literature reveals the dental sector's alignment with the interests of market dentistry.18 As a result, a series of hegemonic practices have developed in Brazil. Although they apply to private dentistry, they can also be found in the public sector.

From the 1950s onwards, a series of apparently contradictory movements began to coexist within the Brazilian context, among which the following stand out:

  • Public Health Dentistry,

  • Preventive Dentistry,

  • Social Dentistry,

  • Simplified Dentistry,

  • Community Dentistry,

  • Comprehensive Dentistry and

  • Collective Dental Health.

To Narvai,17 market dentistry has become hegemonic by aligning itself with the political and ideological interests of liberal society in Brazil, and all the descriptions that have emerged as counter-hegemonic proposals have failed in their mission of breaking with this hegemony.

However, an analysis of the oral health care models in Brazil reveals the influence of these movements in incorporating oral health services in Brazil, whose practices have also become hegemonic in the dental field, even though they have taken on a subordinate position in relation to private or market dentistry, as can be observed in preventive and social dentistry.19

Public health dentistry developed in Brazil as of the 1950s, and is one of the forerunners of collective oral health practices.20 This movement was responsible for establishing the incremental system in health services, referring to the two phases of dental care:

  • the preventive phase, with the introduction of fluoride mouthrinses and topical fluoride, and

  • the curative phase, for children aged 6 to 14 years old within the school environment.

Another strategy of this system of ideas was the fluoridation of the public water supply, seen in the Aymorés pilot experience in Espírito Santo.17 In the 1980s, public health dentistry began to be called social dentistry, although it maintained the same theoretic assumptions. The progress witnessed in this movement in Brazil has been related to the introduction of programmed practice, although this is restricted to a specific population group.

Under the influence of the global preventive medicine movement that originated in American schools, preventive dentistry developed in a like manner, and its theoretical assumptions are founded on the natural history of disease (NHD) model, conceived by Leavell and Clark in 1975. The ideas contained in this movement gained ground in the dentistry field, through successful cariology studies conducted in Scandinavian countries, regarding the control of dental caries within these same countries.17 An international overview of oral health, referred to by Portilho and Ferreira,21 provides evidence of the success of the global spread of the ideas of this movement in other countries. In Brazil, the foundation of the Brazilian Association for the Promotion of Oral Health (Associação Brasileira de Promoção da Saúde Bucal - ABOPREV) substantively supported the dissemination of these ideas.17

In Brazil, in the 1970s, under the influence of Latin America, the ideas propounded by the preventive dentistry movement, addressing simplified dentistry, gained ground. Their core elements were the standardization of professional practice and a reduction in surgical stages, by excluding that which is superfluous, simplifying and lowering prices. Although there was also talk of maintaining quality, program feasibility prescribed only the extending of coverage and the boosting of productivity.17 In the oral health policy sphere in Brazil, these ideas influenced the Program for the Internalization of Health Activities and Services (Programa de Interiorização das Ações e Serviços de Saúde - PIASS) and dentistry for workers, and were incorporated into the dental services of the Social Service of Commerce (Serviço Social do Comércio - SESC) and the Social Service of Industry (Serviço Social da Indústria - SESI), through the establishment of modular clinics.

One outcome that deserves attention is that, as this area of knowledge became consolidated in Brazil, it was adopted at the state level, and incorporated into university curricula under the name of Preventive and Social Dentistry (Odontologia Preventiva e Social - OPS), which represents the merging of ideas contained in both movements. The influence of Preventive and Social Dentistry on public oral health policies was significant in relation to three large-scale state activities:

a. the drafting of Law 6050, on May 24, 1974, which deals with the fluoridation of the public water supply;22

b. the fluoridation of commercial toothpaste in Brazil, and the inclusion of other preventive technologies, such as sealants and topical fluoride; and

c. the conducting of the first epidemiological survey to analyze the Brazilian population's oral health status,23 a survey that fueled discussions about oral health at the first Conference on Oral Health, two years later.

It can be seen that both Market Dentistry and Preventive and Social Dentistry have assumed hegemonic positions in Brazil. A review conducted by Narvai and Almeida24 reports on the growth in Preventive and Social Dentistry production, which had the second highest production in the prevention of oral diseases.

A proposition that strove to bridge this historical gap was placed on the agenda of the political movement for the democratization of the Brazilian society—the Health Reform and the establishment of SUS. The reform encompasses health promotion, the prevention of oral diseases and dental care.

An analysis of the oral health policies in the 20 years of SUS reveals that the advances observed in relation to oral health in Brazil are: 1) the creation of a dental department within the National Institute of Medical Welfare and Social Security (Instituto Nacional de Assistência Médica da Previdência Social - INAMPS), a body under the existing at the time Ministry of Social Security, and 2) the implementation of the National Policy to Control Dental Caries (Programa Nacional de Controle da Cárie Dental - PNCCSF), both of which were centralizing measures. Simultaneously, the Ministry of Health launched the National Oral Health Policy through the National Program for the Prevention of Dental Caries (Programa Nacional de Prevenção da Cárie Dental - PRECAD), even though this countered the effort of decentralization. Moreover, during the Collor government, oral health targets were established in the five-year oral health plan of 1990–1995, and the National Division of Oral Health was turned into a Technical Department under the National Department of Health Care. A ruling was then approved, which incorporated collective procedures (CP) into oral health. Oral health was incorporated into Family Health, and the National Oral Health Policy, Smiling Brazil was drafted.25

Some authors associate the incorporation of dentistry into SUS with the ideas of the Collective Oral Health (Saúde Bucal Coletiva - SBC) movement.17 In the literature, this movement, initiated in the 1980s, represents a range of concepts, but Collective Oral Health is understood here as a theoretical and political movement of national origin, whose scientific frame of reference is not related to social stratification. It refers to all the processes of social, biological and psychological nature, and is understood as a movement consistent with Collective Health, whose historical commitment is to the quality of life in society and the defense of citizenship.26 From this perspective, Collective Oral Health maintains a dialogue with both Brazilian Health Reform and SUS. Its assumptions influenced the debates of the third National Conference on Oral Health27 and the drafting of the National Oral Health Policy, Smiling Brazil.13Table 1 summarizes the main ideological movements that have influenced Brazil and the Brazilian State's respective oral health social responses.

Oral health policies in the 21st century: from the inclusion of oral health in the Family Health Strategy to the National Oral Health Policy

At the start of the 21st century, the Family Health Program (later developing into the Family Health Strategy) was adopted as a strategy to reorganize Brazil's health care model, and progressed substantively. An analysis of its implementation indicates numerical expansion, extended health care coverage and the incorporation of new professional practices into primary care.28 This progress may have driven the Oral Health Team to be incorporated into the Family Health Strategy.12

The heterogeneity and complexity of the process that established the Oral Health Team in the Family Health Strategy are reflected in the context of local government. However, common issues have posed difficulties in setting up Oral Health Teams in the Family Health Strategy. These include:

  • reproducing traditional practices—both clinical and collective;

  • weak links and poor working conditions, reflected in the degree of professional commitment; and

  • the difficulty of inserting planning and management technology into the health team's daily work life.

    6,8-11,29

If an Oral Health Team were established in the Family Health Strategy, first, it would form critical knots that would entangle the structural issues of the Brazilian State. Secondly, the team represents an arena for experimenting innovative practices and proposing changes to the health care model.28 This is why it was incorporated as a strategic line within the National Oral Health Policy.13

The National Oral Health Policy covers the organization of oral health care at all levels of care. Its principal guidelines prioritize the following lines of action:

a. the incorporation of oral health into the family health strategy, in order to reorganize primary care;

b. the qualification of oral health professionals, auxiliaries, technicians and dentists, through ongoing education;

c. the inclusion of complex procedures in basic care;

d. the reorganization of specialized care, with the establishment of Dental Specialty Centers (Centros de Especialidade Odontológica - CEO) and Prosthodontic Laboratories (Laboratórios de Prótese Dentária - LPD);

e. the providing of hospital care, by reorganizing emergency dental services and including oral health in hospital care;

f. the organization of oral health services along epidemiological principles;

g. the definition of policy criteria to guarantee access to oral health services according to lines of care or living conditions; and

h. enabling greater access of the population to fluoridated water by fluoridation of the public water supply.13

In view of its reorganizing potential, the formulation of the National Oral Health Policy represents progress in implementing oral health policies. However, in the years to come a critical analysis of this formulation may result in the redesigning of the pathways of progress. This is borne out by the significant increase in the number of Oral Health Teams in the Family Health Strategy, i.e., by April 2012, it had risen to 4,880 teams. This increase is attributed to the financial incentive mechanisms used by the Ministry of Health to implement and fund the teams.12 It is worth remembering that quantitative expansion does not mean that the practices of agents in the Family Health Program have changed, although it does represent a potential for improved practices.

A recent study sought to determine whether the incorporation of Oral Health Teams into the Family Health Strategy has had an impact on oral health indicators related to the prevalence of injuries and their respective treatment coverage, to access to public services, and to preventive oral health actions. The study used the Northeastern population residing in municipalities with a population over 100,000 inhabitants as a reference, and concluded that performance of these teams in the municipalities studied was poor.30 Pimentel et al.31 analyzed the work processes of oral health teams in the state of Pernambuco and confirmed the following points:

  • the existence of educational practices targeting specific groups in the health units, but also targeting schools in the communities;

  • the organization of services not aligned with epidemiological criteria, insofar as diagnosis was made only as of last year; and

  • the providing of care based on spontaneous demand.

These findings indicate that oral health practices are persistently based on hegemonic models, and that it is difficult to break with these practices in order to organize an oral health care system in line with with SUS and the National Oral Health Policy, and with the ideological and political concepts that apply to Collective Oral Health.

According to Narvai,32 the significant progress made in developing this policy can be attributed to the institutionalization of the epidemiological survey. This had led to promoting the organization of activities under epidemiological criteria and to defining the allocation of funds. Another progress-driving measure includes the expansion of fluoridation of the public water supply, due to its intersectoral importance and to the greater number of municipalities with access to fluoridated water.

The quantitative expansion of specialized care represents the apex of the National Oral Health Policy,32 although the literature provides evidence of difficulties in accessing this level of care.14,33 Studies reveal that compliance with criteria and standards facilitates the widespread implementation of Dental Specialty Centers.33 Another analysis demonstrates that neglecting theoretical assumptions may compromise the organization of care in general.32

The study conducted by Goes et al.34 analyzed 613 Dental Specialty Centers, mostly established in municipalities of medium-level care reference, and showed secondary care compliance in municipalities with less than 50% coverage. However, this finding may suggest an increase in spontaneous demand and a lack of coordination with primary care, since low primary care coverage compromises the referencing process, hence, the importance of questioning the implementation of Dental Specialty Centers in municipalities where basic care is not provided at a minimum of 50% coverage.

A critical point for implementing the National Oral Health Policy lies within the context of its practice. Despite efforts in establishing policy guidelines for constructing comprehensive oral health care, market dentistry as well as preventive and social dentistry remain hegemonic. They strengthen the concept of individual clinical care and prevention of oral diseases in specific groups, particularly schools.6,10 The use of technology applied to planning, management, and health-related social sciences, has not been addressed.

It seems that social participation and oversight are factors that have not been included. The last National Conference on Oral Health took place in 2004, served as the foundation for preparing the National Oral Health Policy, and has required specific attention.32

It can be said that oral health has progressively earned its place on the public health policy scene, with the progressive expansion of state interventions. Analyzing this through the literature brings into evidence the importance that this topic acquired at the beginning of the 21st century, particularly with the incorporation of Oral Health Teams into the Family Health Strategy, which expanded with the addition of the National Oral Health Policy, Smiling Brazil, and was reconfirmed by the attention it received in the restructured primary care policy of 2011.35 The studies of Machado et al.36 and Paim et al.37 corroborate this assertion, insofar as both studies confirmed the inclusion of oral health when they respectively analyzed the government's agenda priorities and the health system in Brazil at the beginning of the 21st century.

Final Considerations

An analysis of oral health policies in Brazil shows significant progress in respect to the participation of the State and to the constitution of a normative policy framework, expressed in the National Oral Health Policy and the ordinances that guarantee its implementation. Challenges include the implementation process, which requires the participation of local governments.

The National Oral Health Policy offers guidelines for reorganizing oral health care at all levels of care; however it mistakenly privileges some directives, such as the establishment of Dental Specialty Centers, which may be the locus of primary care and may favor the maintenance of a model centered on spontaneous demand and market dentistry.

Despite the institutional potential of the Family Health Strategy, the literature demonstrates the persistent reproduction of practices derived from the two hegemonic oral health models, i.e., market dentistry and preventive and social dentistry. It is important that the Family Health Strategy break with these models in order to shape a theoretical frame of reference to drive a new intellectual, moral and cultural course38 for dental pratices.

This new direction should be more consistent with the democratic assumptions of SUS39 and Collective Oral Health ideas that can lead to rupture from the reproduction of policies for care practices that favor SUS for the poor,39 taking into consideration the contradictions inherent in society.

It has been suggested that Collective Oral Health has the potential to do this, but it may be necessary to root a movement of this nature in epistemological soil that can sustain its practice. After all, what is Collective Oral Health practice?

The literature consulted indicates the potential of the National Oral Health Policy to reorganize oral health consistent with the principles and guidelines of both SUS and the Brazilian Health Reform. However, this not only involves the political will of agents who have addressed the construction of a policy as a whole, but also signals the need to bring about changes in society and the State. Nonetheless, these changes do not seem to capture the attention of the Brazilian population, since they are constructed on structural issues. The literature also indicates the need to create institutional participatory mechanisms, which can establish a dialogue with SUS's participation structures within the sphere of civil society, whose involvement has been paramount at specific historical moments, such as those of Brazilian Health Reform and SUS construction.

Submitted: Sep 18, 2012

Accepted for publication: Oct 29, 2012

Last revision: Nov 26, 2012

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  • 39. Paim JS. O que é o SUS. Rio de Janeiro: Fiocruz; 2009.144 p.
  • Corresponding Author:
    Catharina Leite Matos Soares
    E-mail:
  • *
    Paper presented at the "Oral Health Under an Integrality Perspective" International Symposium, held at the 17
    th Congress of the Brazilian Association for Oral Health Promotion (ABOPREV), May 31 to June 2, 2012, Salvador, BA, Brazil.
    Declaration of Interests: The author certifies that she has no commercial or associative interest that represents a conflict of interest in connection with the manuscript.
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      10 Jan 2013
    • Date of issue
      2012

    History

    • Received
      18 Sept 2012
    • Accepted
      29 Oct 2012
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