US Health Crisis and Our Children's Teeth
by Katrina vanden Heuvel
Last Spring, following the death of twelve-year old Deamonte Driver of Maryland whose untreated tooth infection spread to his brain, I wrote about the national epidemic of dental disease and the lack of access to dental care faced by the poor and working class.
Last month, an article in the New York Times painted a horrifying picture of the state of dental care, where bootleggers sell dentures that would otherwise be unaffordable to many people missing teeth; where low Medicaid reimbursement rates perpetuate a dearth of participating dentists; where untreated cavities are a leading cause of kids missing school, people use Krazy Glue to reattach broken teeth, or swish rubbing alcohol to treat an infection, "burning the gums and creating ulcers."
[Republished at PFP with express Agence Global permission.]
Although there has been much talk about healthcare reform in the
presidential campaign, there's been little mention of the dental care
crisis -- and the severe effect it is having on our children.
Currently, Medicaid only covers pulling teeth to treat infections
-- not root canals or dentures -- which can certainly dim the job
prospects for someone trying to earn a living in our economy.
- "Try
finding work when you're in your 30s or 40s and you're missing front
teeth," Jane Stephenson, founder of the New Opportunity School in
Berea, Kentucky told the Times.
According to Maryland
Senator Ben Cardin's staff, dental decay is now the most common chronic
childhood disease in the United States, affecting twenty percent of
children aged 2 to 4, fifty percent of those aged 6 to 8, and nearly
sixty percent of fifteen year olds. It is five times more common than
asthma among school age children, and nearly 40 percent of
African-American children have untreated tooth decay in their adult
teeth. Improper hygiene can increase a child's adult risk of having low
birth-weight babies, developing heart disease, or suffering a stroke.
Eighty percent of all dental problems are found in just 25 percent of
children, primarily those from lower-income families.
In
March, in response to Driver's death, Cardin cosponsored the Children's
Dental Health Improvement Act of 2007 along with Senator Jeff Bingaman,
who had pushed similar legislation for seven years. The bill called for
$40 million annually for five years to help community health centers
hire dentists to serve poor children. It also would have awarded $50
million in grants to help states improve dental services to children
enrolled in Medicaid or the State Children's Health Insurance Program
(SCHIP). At the time, Cardin said on the Senate floor:
- "It is
outrageous today that in America, a young boy can die because his
family can't find a dentist to remove an infected tooth. It is not
enough simply to mourn Deamonte's death. We must learn from this
failure of our health-care system and take action to make sure it never
happens again."
The dental bill was folded into the CHIP
bill. The final version of CHIP -- passed by Congress and vetoed by
President Bush -- didn't contain the grants sought by Cardin and
Bingaman but it did guarantee dental coverage to kids and also
established minimum standards of care. Senator Cardin explained the
dilemma he and his colleagues faced:
- "When things get tight in state
budgets, one of the first things they cut is something that's not
mandated, so when we had to choose between grants to cover dental
benefits or a guarantee of dental care, the latter was a greater,
immediate priority. We know now that dental care is vital to a child's
overall health -- experts tell us that it impacts many other aspects of
their health as well. Not to mention it's an indicator of one's ability
to get ahead and thrive," he said.
Cardin, Bingaman, and
their allies were successful in passing $5 million in grants in the
Labor Health and Human Services bill to help states reach poor kids but
clearly -- as indicated by the initial grant request -- the need is far
greater than that. Even Cardin said of the CHIP bill:
- "There is more
work to do…. We still have to improve reimbursement for dental
providers [so more dentists will participate in Medicaid], and get
grants to the states to allow them to offer dental wraparound coverage
for those who may have health coverage, but no dental insurance."
A
Cardin spokeswoman also said that this is the best that Democrats were
able to achieve at this time.
- "Clearly healthcare in the United States
needs help. We need to fix the system as a whole and Democrats in the
Senate are trying to make changes that reflect those priorities."
Indeed,
improving reimbursement rates and the availability of dentists is
necessary in order for poor kids to avoid long waiting lists and get
the timely services needed. (One dentist, for example, told the
Washington Post that an abscess "is like a time bomb, ticking.") When
Driver passed away nearly a year ago the state Senate initially
responded with legislation to provide $2 million annually over the next
three years to expand dental clinics for the poor. But it was
determined at the time that the funds were not available, causing State
Senator Jamie Raskin to tell me;
- "We always have enough money for
things we don't need -- like funding the war in Iraq, or boondoggle
projects that will make developers a lot of money. But when it comes to
things we do need -- like dental care for kids -- suddenly there's no
money."
According to the Washington Post, less than
one-third of nearly 500,000 Maryland children on Medicaid saw a dentist
last year, "a statistic that is typical of the problem nationwide."
But
things are looking a little better in the state now. After Driver's
death, Maryland Department of Health & Mental Hygiene Secretary
John M. Colmers created a Dental Action Committee to make concrete
recommendations on what could be done to increase access of dental care
providers for lower-income people. One of the key recommendations was a
$44 million grant to raise Medicaid reimbursement rates equal to the
median charges in the Atlantic region. Maryland Governor Martin
O'Malley's proposed budget -- released last week – requests $16.1
million, including $14 million to increase Medicaid reimbursement rates
($7 million from the state, matched by the federal government); $1.4
million for two new dental clinics in regions that currently don't have
them; and $700,000 for a mobile dental clinic to serve the school
system. Colmers said they hope to phase-in the $44 million Medicaid
allotment over 3 years.
- "We're not going to solve these
problems overnight," Colmers told me. "This is a substantial
down-payment towards reaching our goals."
Raskin agreed.
- "You feel the difference between having Democrats and Republicans in
state office on an issue like this. The Democrats really feel that the
misdistribution of dental care is a scandal and are willing to pay to
get dental care to poor kids. Budget times are tough but this is an
excellent use of targeted funds," he said. "The Democrats feel very
passionate about this. I talk to constituents who tell me that the
quality of dental care people receives has become a very good predictor
of how well they will progress in the work force and how well they will
do in life. Dental care is key to individual opportunity in America."
Although
there has been much talk about healthcare reform in the presidential
campaign, there has been little mention of dental care. The Obama and
Edwards campaigns declined to comment for this article. Ann Lewis,
Senior Advisor at Hillary Clinton for President, pointed to a recent
speech Senator Clinton delivered in Iowa where she made her commitment
to dental coverage clear -- and it happened to touch on Deamonte
Driver's death:
- "I want to cover dental care. And in the
congressional plan, which I open up to everybody... there are more than
250 plan choices. Most of them cover dental care. One of the things we
are finding out is all of the connections between dental problems and
heart disease, between dental problems and other systemic conditions.
So, if we don't cover dental care, you're going to miss a lot of the
problems that will then get very expensive... I talked about the story
of a young boy, 12-years old, living in Maryland… had a toothache. [His
mother] couldn't find a dentist to take him because they didn't have
any money for a dentist. They called every dentist they could get and
some were very sympathetic, but they said, ‘Well, we already have our
full compliment of charity patients. We can't take anybody else.'
Turned out he had an abscess. The abscess burst, so he ends up in Johns
Hopkins Hospital. They tried to save him. He dies. The hospital
incurred $300,000 worth of medical care trying to save him because his
mother couldn't get a $60, $70, $80… dental visit. So that's the kind
of story that underscores the unfairness of the system, but also the
importance of covering dental care, and I intend to do everything I can
to make that happen."
It's good to see some Democrats on the
Hill -- and in the statehouses -- working so hard to craft a sane and
humane response to this epidemic. Much remains to be done, but there
are good people who will keep this on the radar and continue this fight.
Katrina vanden Heuvel is the Editor and Publisher of The Nation magazine.
Copyright © 2008 The Nation
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Released: 19 January 2008
Word Count: 1,507
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Released: 19 January 2008
Word Count: 1,507
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