By: Jessica Brodkin Webb
A public statement from the Gary and Mary West Senior Dental center says they have temporarily closed the low-income dental clinic that serves seniors across San Diego county but are offering teledentistry and are in the process of preparing 5,000 home care oral hygiene kits to be distributed through delivery by Serving Seniors.
However, a talk with their CEO and Dental Director, Dr. Karen Becerra reveals a grim picture that goes beyond dropping off hygiene kits for seniors isolating at home through the COVID-19 pandemic and into the struggle to care for an underserved population.
“We have 1,300 patients on record and our approach is whole person: medical, social, mental and dental. Under normal circumstances, we work with our partners to make sure all those are addressed. In this pandemic, we’ve had to adjust. Our patients know us and they’re asking us what to do about medication, about pain, about access to food,” Becerra said.
The dentist quickly lists off some of the items in the kits that are being delivered to seniors: toothpaste, toothbrush, mouth rinse, dental floss, soap and other health care supplies, then says her biggest challenge as a health care provider right now is her struggle to teach people that everything is connected to oral health.
“If you don’t take care of what is happening in your mouth things can get bad very quickly— I have an 80-year old patient, diabetic, with an infection. We are just buying time with antibiotics before she is seen in person and the tooth is extracted with a possible root canal. We may have bought her three or four weeks of being able to stay at home,” Becerrra said.
She says the fact that the patient can remain at home is a win and provides background for her concern: the average income of the senior citizens they treat at the low-income clinic is $800 a month and she says many of her patients are on the brink of homelessness.
“Here in San Diego, that isn’t that much. We hear from seniors everywhere— last week I spoke to one who was in tears. ‘With a limited income, where do I go and what do I do now?’ That was my hardest calllast week. Her isolation, her anxiety: I have to take those calls and not break down,” Becerra said.Becerra also says many of her clients and, she suspects, seniors in general do not rely on the internet as frequently as younger generations and therefore might not be aware of resources that are out there.
“Many of the seniors I know do not have home internet, they often relyon phone calls for information. That adds to the struggle. The day that broke my heart was the Friday that it was raining— I saw senior citizens lined up in the rain, waiting for food,” Becerra said.
To read the full article, please visit: The Alpine Sun