A new practical guide has been launched geared towards prison dentists and those commissioning prison dental services. Guidelines for the Appointment of Dentists with Special Interests (DwSIs) in Prison Dentistry is produced by the Faculty of General Dental Practice (UK) in conjunction with the Department of Health, the Oxford Deanery, the British Association for the Study of Community Dentistry and NHS Primary Care Contracting.

It is intended to help prison managers and healthcare commissioners define more closely the role and working arrangements for prison dentists. The competency frameworks set out in the document will also help prison dentists to identify their learning needs, and undertake further training so that they can improve standards of care.

According to the organisation, prisoners generally have a poorer standard of oral health, with increased levels of emergency cases, higher rates of substance misuse and smoking, and underlying poor nutrition. The demand for dental care in prisons is also increasing as the prison population continues to grow.

Helen Falcon, Postgraduate Dental Dean for NHS Education South Central (Oxford and Wessex Deaneries) and Chair of the working group which developed the guidelines, explained that prison dentists, along with other healthcare workers in the prison setting, are in a unique position requiring them to balance the need to provide the best possible care to their patients with the priorities and restrictions imposed by the prison environment.

'These include the inability to provide sedation and general anaesthesia within the prison setting, different protocols for pre- and post-operative pain relief, the need to minimise referrals outside of the prison, and security issues,' she said. Standards for the appointment of DwSIs in conscious sedation are currently being developed, with a launch expected in early 2008.