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Lonely? Anxious? Depressed? Maybe Your Dentist Can Help

Mental health counselor Zona Keo talks with a client at an Asian Health Services dental clinic in Oakland. (Michael Short/Special to The San Francisco Chronicle)

OAKLAND, Calif. 鈥 Dr. Huong Le spends an average of 45 minutes with each of her dental patients during their visits, so she gets to know them well, especially the older ones who come in more than twice a year.

She hears about their families, stories from their home countries and, often, how lonely they feel. More than once, Le and her staff at have heard their patients express .

This prompted Le, a dentist of more than 30 years, to respond to her patients鈥 cries for help. Her dental clinic, near Oakland鈥檚 Chinatown, started depression screening for patients 65 and older in 2017.

Then Le took the concept one step further last year by hiring a full-time mental health counselor and giving her an office right at the dental clinic, where she can see patients immediately, should they need it. Later this year, the depression screenings and counseling services will expand to patients 12 and older.

鈥淲hen you have someone who is telling you they鈥檙e going to go home and kill themselves, and you think, 鈥業鈥檓 a dental provider; what can I do?鈥 鈥 that was one of the moments when I knew, wow, we need someone, a professional who is trained in this here,鈥 said Le, the chief dental officer at Asian Health Services. The community health clinic, which operates several sites in Alameda County, primarily caters to Asian immigrants, a group that often shuns behavioral health services because of the stigma associated with mental illness.

Dentist Huong Le (left) enlisted Zona Keo, a social worker and mental health professional, to help patients who voice feelings of loneliness and even suicidal thoughts during dentist visits.(Michael Short/Special to The San Francisco Chronicle)

The kind of immediate, in-house handoff offered by Asian Health Services is available at many medical clinics. But it鈥檚 a new concept at community dental clinics and virtually unheard of at private dental offices 鈥 even though some experts praise the model as an innovative way to make mental health services accessible to hard-to-reach populations.

Dr. Irene Hilton, a dental consultant at the , said she hasn鈥檛 heard of any other community dental clinics that embed a mental health practitioner right in their office.

Doing so 鈥渢otally makes sense,鈥 Hilton said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 really engage in self-management of a chronic disease, including gum disease, or cavities, if you鈥檙e not in the right frame of mind,鈥 she said.

Dr. Lorna Flamer-Caldera, past president of the , agrees that dental offices are an untapped resource for addressing mental health problems.

鈥淒epression affects such a large segment of the population that all avenues that can be used to steer patients鈥 should be utilized, she said.

Flamer-Caldera does not screen for depression at her dental office, but she is trained to look for signs of it. She encourages patients to visit their primary care doctors if she thinks they would benefit from professional help.

At Asian Health Services, dental patients receive a stack of forms when they check in. One is a survey that asks whether they experience anxiety, feel sad or have had negative thoughts.

If they respond yes to these or similar questions, they鈥檙e invited to chat with Zona Keo, the social worker and mental health counselor embedded in the clinic, after the dentist sees them. They can also make an appointment for a later date.

for Asian and Pacific Islanders was 7 deaths per 100,000 people in 2016, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In comparison, the suicide rate among Hispanics and non-Hispanic blacks was 6.4 deaths per 100,000 and 18.1 for non-Hispanic whites.

People in the diverse and low-income populations served by community health centers often don鈥檛 seek mental health services on their own, Keo said, and they face transportation, language and cultural barriers.

That鈥檚 why she believes it鈥檚 critical to offer her services in a place patients already plan to visit, like a dental clinic.

Stereotypes and misconceptions about mental health are common among the older immigrants served by Asian Health Services, but even some younger patients are reluctant to seek help, Keo said.

鈥淲e have patients whose parents were refugees, and they feel guilty to talk about mental health because they think, 鈥榃ell, my parents went through an actual struggle 鈥 they went on a boat, swam across a river, walked through bombs, and here I am complaining about mental stress,鈥欌 she said. 鈥淪o they keep quiet.鈥

To avoid scaring patients away from mental health services, Keo refrains from using terms like 鈥渆motions鈥 or 鈥渢herapy.鈥

鈥淚 have to feel out the patient and say what I think is appropriate for each individual,鈥澛爏aid Keo, who speaks the Cambodian language Khmer, in addition to English.

Donna Jung, a longtime social worker at Asian Health Services who works in a different building, noted that having a mental health provider there makes it easier for patients to avoid saying they鈥檙e going to therapy, because it鈥檚 a dental office.

鈥淪ome patients don鈥檛 even tell their families鈥 out of fear of being stigmatized, but also because they don鈥檛 want to worry their children, Jung explained.

So far, Keo鈥檚 list of referrals from the dental clinic has been short and patients frequently cancel mental health appointments or say they feel better after one visit, she said.

When the clinic starts screening younger patients later this year, and as patients become more familiar with her role, Keo expects the list to grow.

鈥淚 want patients to know we鈥檙e here for them,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd that this is a dental office but also a safe space for mental health.鈥

This story was produced by聽, which publishes聽, an editorially independent service of the聽.

Related Topics

California Mental Health Public Health