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This piece comes to us courtesy of Stateline. Stateline is a nonpartisan, nonprofit news service of the
Pew Charitable Trusts that provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.
NEW YORK At the Interfaith Dental Center in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, people with dental pain can
walk into a ground floor office off Bedford Avenue and get treated without an appointment. They
might have to wait in a packed waiting room. But if theyre in the door by 5 p.m., a dentist will see
them.
Residents in this low- to middle-income neighborhood likely dont realize how lucky they are. The
majority of Americans have to travel miles to see a dentist who takes their insurance, particularly if
theyre covered by Medicaid. Many dental patients with private insurance cannot afford to pay their
share of the bill.
Federal law requires state Medicaid programs to include dental care for children, and the Affordable
Care Act extended that requirement to private insurers. But the federal health law did little for
adults: While premium tax credits were made available to help low-income people purchase health
insurance, the subsidies cannot be used to purchase dental coverage except as an add-on to health
coverage. No new dental benefit requirements were included for adults covered by Medicaid.
The ACA was a big flop when it comes to adult dental coverage, said Dr. Jonathan Shenkin, vice
president of the American Dental Association (ADA).
Even so, some states have stepped up coverage for at least some adults on Medicaid. Virginia added
a dental benefit for pregnant women in March. Colorado introduced limited adult dental coverage
for the first time last year. Also last year, California, Illinois, Massachusetts and South Carolina
reinstated benefits that had been cut in the years since the recession began in 2007. Indiana began
offering expanded adult dental benefits this year.
Shenkin acknowledged the
Patchwork of Funding
New York has offered comprehensive dental coverage for adults in Medicaid for as long as anyone
can remember. But the fees it pays dentists are among the lowest in the country only 37 percent of
what private insurance pays.
Still, New Yorkers, particularly those living in the populous southern half of the state close to New
York City have better access to dental care than most people in the country. The biggest reason is
the state requires dental students to complete a year of postgraduate residency to become certified.
To do that, they must provide full-time dental care wherever they can find patients.
That requirement adds about 900 dentists to the states workforce at any given time, all of them on
salary and eager to work on Medicaid enrollees and other low-income patients, said Dr. David Miller,
who heads the Interfaith Dental Center. (Delaware is the only other state that has a similar dental
residency requirement.)
In Crown Heights, Miller said his clinic also benefits from its affiliation with Interfaith Medical
Center, which is about a mile away. The staff there includes grant writers who have brought in
federal, state and local money to help provide the services most in demand in the community. Adult
dental care is a top priority, he said.
Miller said his clinic is part of Interfaiths integrated medical system. Dentistry is not separate, its a
collaboration with the emergency department, anesthesia and internal medicine. Our patients are
being well taken care of, Miller said. We couldnt do it on Medicaid alone.
As president-elect of the New York dental association, Miller said hes concerned that the statewide
enrollment of dentists in Medicaids provider network is stagnant. New York has begun a transition
to managed care for dentistry and other health care services that he anticipates will present even
more challenges for dentists who serve Medicaid patients, especially small practices.
Under Medicaid managed care, all dental practices will have to negotiate separately with each
insurance plan if they want to serve Medicaid patients. If youre not a big entity with lots of practices
and lots of specialties, you have a lot less to bring to the table. Managed care companies are trying
to find one-stop shopping, Miller said.
Health and Cost Savings
Medical research shows that poor oral health results in increased risk for diabetes, breathing
disorders, cardiovascular disease and poor pregnancy outcomes such as preterm births and
stillbirths. It also affects eating, speaking and self-esteem, as well employability.
Low-income adults are 40 percent less likely than those with higher incomes to have seen a dentist
in the last year, according to the Center for Health Care Strategies, which provides research and
technical assistance to state Medicaid programs. More than 40 percent have untreated tooth decay,
and one-third of those 65 or older have lost all of their teeth. People with disabilities and elders who
live in a nursing facility are at even greater risk of dental disease.
Lack of regular dental care also drives up costs. Unlike diabetes, hypertension and other chronic
diseases that affect millions of people, dental disease affects everyone. With regular preventive care,
most oral health problems can be avoided or curtailed. Without it, people end up in emergency
rooms, often with problems that are more expensive to treat, Shenkin explained.
A recent study showed that Californias decision to end its dental program in 2009, which had
covered 3.5 million low-income adults, resulted in a 68 percent increase in costs for emergency
department use for dental pain.
I think the important point here is although the Medicaid dental benefit for adults is optional,
savings derived from dropping the benefit are somewhat eaten up by the increased costs from adults
seeking dental care in hospital emergency departments, author Astha Singhal wrote in the journal
Health Affairs.
Lack of Continuity
Many Americans arent aware of the importance of oral health. With a scarcity of dentists,
particularly in rural areas, transportation can also be an issue.
Too many people think they dont need to go to a dentist unless theyre in pain, said Stacey Chazin,
senior program officer at the Center for Health Care Strategies. At that point, they often have
nowhere to go but emergency rooms, she said.
Once they see a dentist and learn more about oral health, people tend to go in for regular check-ups,
she said. But maintaining continuity of care can be difficult when state Medicaid programs shrink or
withdraw dental coverage from one year to the next.
Fluctuations in Medicaid benefits also affect dentists willingness to go to the effort of registering as
a Medicaid provider. Its no way to build a relationship with the dental community, said Matt Salo,
executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors.
Because adult dental care is optional, states have to justify it financially, he said. So far, there are no
standard quality measures for dental health, and most studies project savings over too long a time
frame for states to warrant the added expenditure in any given budget year.
That may be changing, though. According to Salo, state Medicaid agencies are becoming more
interested in improving the health of their overall populations. Increased recognition that dental
health is an important component of health and economic mobility may spur more states to include
dental benefits, particularly in expansion states where many of the new adults coming into the
Medicaid system have untreated dental conditions, he said.
In the few states that have expanded adult dental coverage so far, its too early to know how much of
a difference it will make in improving oral health and saving on Medicaid spending, Chazin said.
Folks need to know about it and enroll. They need to be educated about it and find a provider. It will
take at least a year or two.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/06/10/dental-care-medicaid_n_7553544.html