
The World Health Organization (WHO) European region recently released a status report on oral health, emphasizing that national health coverage packages must expand access to oral healthcare services.
The call to action comes in response to findings that the region, which covers 53 countries across Europe and Central Asia, has the highest prevalence of major oral disease cases and the highest prevalence of caries of the permanent teeth globally.
Some key findings from the report include the following:
- The  European region had the highest prevalence of major oral disease cases (50.1%  of the adult population) across all six WHO regions worldwide. This includes  the highest prevalence of caries of permanent teeth across all WHO regions,  which at 33.6% of the European region’s population represents almost 335  million cases in 2019.
- The  region had the second greatest proportion of cases of tooth loss (25.2%), which  affected approximately 88 million people age 20 or  older. This translates to a prevalence of 12.4%, the highest among the WHO  regions and almost double the global prevalence of 6.8%.
- The  region also had the second-highest estimated number among the WHO regions of  new oral cancer cases, at almost 70,000. This number accounts for 18.5% of the  total estimated number of cases globally. More than 26,500 deaths in the European  region were attributable to oral cancers in 2020.
- Of  the European region’s 53 countries, 34 (66.7%) did not have a national oral  health policy. 
- Eleven countries (23.4%) did not have dedicated staff for oral diseases in the noncommunicable diseases department of their ministries of health.
The report stated that some drivers of these trends include the ubiquitous availability of foods and beverages with a high sugar content, “aggressive” marketing of high-sugar foods and beverages and tobacco, poor access to oral healthcare services, and inadequate exposure to fluoride.
The WHO is urging governments to develop new national oral health policies that align with the WHO Global Strategy on Oral Health and national noncommunicable disease and universal health coverage policies. In addition, it recommends that dedicated staff and funds be allocated toward oral health and that policy measures should address nutrition labeling and offerings, among other areas.



















