Unheralded

JIM DURKIN: Minnesota To The Philippines — Poor Oral Hygiene Habits Force Dentists To Take The Last Resort: Extraction

Out came the teeth, 12 in all. The extractions would at least temporarily stop the pain of one Filipino man, but it was emblematic of a nationwide crisis that yanked at the heart of an American dentist.

Dr. Kordie Reinhold says work at the new Mariveles District Hospital is a complete reversal of her dental practice in Minnesota.
Dr. Kordie Reinhold says work at the new Mariveles District Hospital is a complete reversal of her dental practice in Minnesota.

“He’s 28. He has two children, and this was the first time he had been to a dentist,” said Dr. Kordie Reinhold, a Minneapolis dentist. “I removed 12 teeth that were basically decayed to the gum line. That was the most I felt he could tolerate today.

“This is way worse than I expected,” Reinhold said of the patients she has seen in her first medical mission to the Philippines. “There is rampant decay — children have their teeth decayed off to the gum lines. I’m removing adult teeth on 9-year-olds, and they’ve only had those teeth for three years.

“It’s a big public health issue.”

Dr. Kordie Reinhold works on a 28-year-old man who had 12 teeth pulled.
Dr. Kordie Reinhold works on a 28-year-old man who had 12 teeth pulled.

National statistics back up her assessment. One survey says more than 92 percent of Filipinos have tooth decay and 78 percent have gum disease. That same report said 74 percent of 12-year-olds have gingivitis.

Reinhold, 58, is the only U.S. dentist with the Philippine Minnesotan Medical Association mission group of about 100 Minnesota doctors, nurses and others who are spending the week in the Philippines.  She is joined at Mariveles District Hospital each day by anywhere from seven to 12 dentists from the region.

Jerico Avila, a Delta Airlines employee, and Cathy Boland, a St. Paul hotel worker, work with Reinhold in the dental division. They each have six medical missions under their belt, all spent in dental work.

“They are amazing,” said Reinhold, who credits them with keeping the entire operation flowing.

Dentists work side-by-side in an open room to treat more than 225 patients each day.
Dentists work side-by-side in an open room to treat more than 250 patients each day.

That’s no small task, given Reinhold and her associates are treating an average of 250 patients daily. They have a their wide-open office space where plastic-lined garbage cans serve as spit sinks. There are only four dental chairs so many of the patients sit in regular chairs and just tilt back their heads as the dentists work.

Extractions are the main order of business.

Some ice helped ease the pain of this woman.
Some ice helped ease the pain of this woman.

“I almost never do just one per patient. It’s always multiple. I try to do most of what each patient needs, but with so many people needing attention, you kind of get to the point where you have to address pain,” Reinhold said.

It’s a complete reversal of her dental practice in Minnesota.

“I live in this nice neighborhood in Minneapolis where people have their teeth checked every six months. Their issues are so minor. It’s almost mind-boggling to compare the two.”

Sometimes a stuffed animal can ease the pain.
Sometimes a stuffed animal can ease the pain.




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