Minnesota
Related: About this forumExtra funding does little to increase dental care for Medical Assistance recipients (MN)
MPR, February 24, 2023
But Sundve, who lives in Litchfield, Minn., said getting her foster kids in to see a dentist was hard. It's because they're on Medical Assistance or Medicaid, as it's more commonly known outside Minnesota and dont see a dentist regularly.
You call and call and call and ask people if they have any new patients availability. And the answer often is No."
. . . In 2021, state legislators tried to fix the problem by nearly doubling the amount of money MA pays dentists for each appointment. They set goals for the number of visits MA enrollees should have annually.
But based on data from the state and from health insurance companies that manage most MA enrollees, the changes havent made much of a difference.
For years, low reimbursement rates were to blame for Minnesotas notably low access to dental care for MA enrollees, Liebling said. Rates were based on decades old dental costs.
Kind of famously, those rates are really low. Another complaint we would hear is that dentists weren't even told what they would be paid until after they provided the service, she said.
MORE: https://www.mprnews.org/story/2023/02/24/extra-funding-does-little-to-increase-dental-care-for-ma-recipients
Reimbursement rates are still way low even after doubling, compared to regular commercial insurance reimbursement rates or prevailing rates
And there is a big shortage of dental assistants and hygienists.
See also:
About 655,000 Minnesota children were enrolled in Medicaid, but only 36 percent of them received dental services included in their coverage, according to 2017 statistics. That puts Minnesota noticeably below the national average.
The number of dentists who see children in public programs declined from 2,906 in 2015 to about 2,253 last year, according to the Department of Human Services.
More: https://www.mprnews.org/story/2018/11/28/low-income-minnesota-families-struggle-to-get-dental-care
delisen
(6,542 posts)Dentistry is a licensed profession. A valid question is what are are licensed professions doing to serve the people in the states that license them.
The American Dental Association is a national trade organization. Are they seeing their role as a narrow one of protecting their members livelihood and income or do they they see a role for improving dental care for all?
Many European countries an Japan provide certain dental services in schools. Their children have much better dental health than our children. Maybe there is a connection.
I hope these reports of dental impoverishment and pain and suffering of children will begin to disabuse us of the notion that fluoridation of water is a miracle dental treatment for children.
dflprincess
(28,506 posts)Where the tie between oral and cardiac health becomes more important.
The various MA programs will cover heart problems but apparently won't pay to prevent them by making dental care easier to access.
It is odd that we continue to treat good dental care as a luxury and somehow not related to healthcare.
delisen
(6,542 posts)I will keep this in mind.