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Future Strategies for Oral Hypofunction ― A 2040 Challenge Connecting Policy, Clinical Practice, and Community Care ― - The 6th International Dental Symposium

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Session

Dr. DH

10/ 4(sun)

9:00 - 10:30

4F〜6F ホール C

Session 17

Future Strategies for Oral Hypofunction
― A 2040 Challenge Connecting Policy, Clinical Practice, and Community Care ―

口腔機能低下症の未来戦略
~制度・臨床・地域をつなぐ2040年への挑戦~

 

 

Moderator & Lecturer  

Current Perspectives on Oral Hypofunction in Clinical Practice

口腔機能低下症の臨床最前線

  • Clinical changes over the past decade since oral hypofunction began to be applied in practice
  • The significance of incorporating oral hypofunction into routine clinical practice
  • How to use examination results in daily clinical care
When oral hypofunction began to be applied in clinical practice, attention focused on objectively assessing oral function and making a diagnosis based on the results. Over the past decade, however, the significance of such examinations has become widely recognized. The focus has now shifted to how examination results can be used to guide oral function management in routine clinical practice and how related changes can be monitored over time. Examination results are relevant not only to functional training but also to dental treatment planning, including prosthodontic treatment. This lecture aims to provide an opportunity to consider the next step: how oral function management can be smoothly incorporated into daily clinical practice and become established as one component of oral health management, in integration with other aspects of dental care.
 

Lecturer  

The Background to the Insurance Coverage of Oral Hypofunction and Future Perspectives in Dental Health Care

口腔機能低下症のプロローグと歯科保健医療のこれから

  • Insurance coverage for the examination and management of oral hypofunction
  • Promotion of oral and dental health throughout the life course
  • Future directions for the dental healthcare system toward 2040
Eight years have passed since the Japanese national health insurance system’s coverage of oral function management for oral hypofunction in 2018. As we are approaching 2040, the number of the older population with complex medical and long-term care in Japan is expected to increase. Therefore, the importance of optimizing oral function in clinical care continues to expand. This lecture will review recent trends in dental health care and discuss the factors that prompted the national insurance system to include oral hypofunction management. In addition, the presentation will explore future perspectives and initiatives aimed to further promote oral and dental health throughout the life course, including the management of oral function. Through this discussion, the author aims to explore how oral health strategies can contribute to healthier aging and improved quality of life in an aging society.
 

Lecturer  

Recent Advances in the Clinical Evaluation of Declined Masticatory and Swallowing Function

咀嚼嚥下機能低下の評価における新展開

  • Mechanisms of Eating Solid and Swallowing Liquid
  • Decline and Dysfunction of Masticatory and Swallowing Function
  • Emerging Trends in the Evaluation of Masticatory and Swallowing Function
The mechanisms involved in eating solid food differ from those of swallowing a liquid bolus. Understanding these differences is essential for the appropriate evaluation and management of dysphagia. This lecture will review the physiological mechanisms underlying chewing-swallowing and liquid swallowing, and discuss age-related decline and disorders affecting these functions. Particular attention will be given to the detection of impaired masticatory and swallowing function. In addition, current clinical assessment methods will be summarized. Finally, emerging approaches for functional assessment, such as wearable sensors, digital monitoring, and artificial intelligence-assisted analysis, will be introduced, with discussion of their potential to improve early detection, personalized intervention, and future dysphagia care.
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