Mo. 39° / 66°
Ariz. 55° / 86°
Calif. 44° / 77°

ATSU News


The latest updates about ATSU news, current events, research, and more.

ATSU News
Video
Still Magazine
ATSU President
Scholarly Activity
Museum of Osteopathic Medicine
Story Idea?

Story Idea?

Click here to attach a file
Submit
Cancel

ATSU-ASDOH to be outfitted with dedicated anesthesia suites

This summer, A.T. Still University’s Center for Advanced Oral Health will become the first nonprofit community dental clinic in Arizona with permanent anesthesia suites. The creation and outfitting of the suites will increase the clinic’s capacity to serve older patients for whom anesthesia is essential such as those with Alzheimer’s disease, other types of dementia, and other medically complex conditions. The suites are being funded by a $160,000 grant from Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust.

Photo1The expansion of The Center’s anesthesia services, until now available to a limited number of patients at a time via a mobile anesthesia cart, reflects the mission of the 11,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility, the first of its kind in Arizona. That mission is to care for individuals whose complicated oral health needs or medically complex conditions like cancer, cardiac disease, renal disease, bleeding disorders, and physical, developmental and cognitive disabilities, make it challenging for them to receive dental treatment without sedation.

The new suites will benefit the Center’s many patients on a fixed income, who would otherwise be unable to afford dental anesthesia for procedures like fillings, root canals, crowns, cleaning, extractions and implants.

Said Maureen Perry, DDS, MPA, director of The Center and Associate Dean for Post- Doctoral Education at ATSU’s Arizona School of Dentistry & Oral Health, which operates it, “We are immensely grateful to Piper Trust for this grant and the vote of confidence it represents. Creating permanent anesthesia suites will ensure that older Arizonans and others with cognitive or other challenges receive the high-quality yet affordable dental care they deserve in a timely manner, thereby preventing the development of related health problems.”

“The anesthesia suites at A.T. Still University’s Center for Advanced Oral Health will provide older adults with a critical service that has the potential to improve their quality of life and overall health,” said Susan M. Pepin, MD, president and CEO of Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust.

As the U.S. population ages, the number of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia – the vast majority of them older adults – grows, leaving the healthcare system to scramble to catch up. According to the National Institute on Aging, as many as 5 million Americans 65 and older may have Alzheimer’s disease, with the number doubling for every five-year interval after age 65.

Currently, for every patient at ATSU’s Center for Advanced Oral Health who receives dental anesthesia, there are three on the waiting list. The waiting period is three months long, a delay with potentially devastating effects on patients’ overall health and a commensurate impact on Arizona’s healthcare costs.

The $160,000 grant from Piper Trust will help address these challenges. The money will fund the conversion of two dental operating rooms into dental anesthesia suites; the creation of both a waiting area and a recovery room designed to be soothing, quiet spaces where older adults will feel comfortable and relaxed as they wait for or recover from treatment; and the purchase of anesthesia machines, monitors, an emergency crash cart with a defibrillator, and other equipment needed to administer anesthesia.

ATSU’s Center for Advanced Oral Health is one of four teaching clinics operated by the Arizona School of Dentistry & Oral Health and serving as both treatment centers for Arizona residents and training facilities for ATSU’s post-doctoral dental residents and dental and medical students.

Newsletters

Never miss out—get the feed today!