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Improving Medicaid patients access to dental care

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... Wisconsin, state and federal governments spend less than one percent, or just ... If approved, the state would still spend less than two percent of its entire MA ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Improving Medicaid patients access to dental care


1
Improving Medicaid patients access to dental care
2
Vast majority of dental diseases are infectious,
irreversible and destructive.
  • 40-year-old male (patient has dental insurance)
    seen by Dr. Mick McCormick (Mauston).

3
Dental diseases can only be diagnosed and
successfully treated with proper intervention by
a licensed dentist and qualified dental staff.
  • In Wisconsin, state and federal governments spend
    less than one percent, or just 38 million of
    4.4 billion annual Medicaid (MA) budget, on oral
    health programs for children and adults.
  • Four out of five states spend higher percentage
    of MA dollars on dental care for children and
    adults than Wisconsin, according to the American
    Dental Association (ADA).

4
The American Academy of Pediatrics (physicians)
says 20 percent of all health care funds spent on
children should be directed at improving and
maintaining oral health.
  • Four-year-old female Green Bay resident treated
    at First Impressions in Wausau due to lack of MA
    providers in her community. Disease so advanced
    pediatric dentist had to treat at Wausau Surgery
    Center under general anesthesia.

5
First Impressions has been committed to seeing
children on MA despite the financial losses this
imposes on the practice.
  • Four-year-old female from Green Bay.
  • First Impressions is a multi-practitioner
    pediatric dental practice that gets only 40
    percent return on MA billings. (Break-even point
    for most dental offices, not including dentists
    salary, is about 65 cents on the dollar.)

6
Maintaining ones oral health improves overall
health and can help keep health care costs lower.
  • 23-year-old female MA patient treated by Dr.
    McCormick early in 2007.
  • Paying reasonable rates improves a persons
    access to a dental home where he/she can
    receive comprehensive dental care.

7
Death of 12-year-old, low-income boy in
Maryland from a severe brain infection that
spread from an abscessed tooth illustrates that
neglecting dental health can be serious and
costly.
  • It was reported a dental extraction costing 80
    accessed early on would have solved the
    12-year-olds problem follow-up medical
    treatment, which unfortunately did not save the
    childs life, cost 250,000. Stories such as this
    are heartbreaking and unacceptable in a society
    such as ours.

8
95 percent of Wisconsins practicing dentists are
small business owners.
  • 23-year-old female MA patient treated by Dr.
    McCormick early in 2007.
  • Small-business owner dentists do not impose a
    hidden tax on private-pay patients by
    cost-shifting losses incurred through
    participation in an inadequately-funded state
    dental MA program.

9
Dr. McCormick billed the states MA program for
one comprehensive oral exam, PAN X-rays, a
three-surface resin filling and surgical removal
of two teeth for a total cost of 919.
  • He received a state MA reimbursement check for
    283.65 or just 30.8 percent of the real cost.

10
MA patients experience insufficient access,
because
  • of the states lack of commitment to this
    program dentists either limit their MA
    participation or drop their certification.

11
Dental access improves when fair-market rates are
implemented.
12
One out of every two WDA practicing dentists
recently answered a questionnaire about dental MA
participation.
  • Nearly 80 percent of respondents said they would
    begin seeing or see new MA patients if rates were
    raised to the 75th percentile of the most recent
    ADA fee survey for this region of the country.
  • The 50 percent of WDA member dentists who
    responded to the questionnaire alone would see
    approximately 111,400 new MA patients.
  • 140,000 patients currently receive dental
    services annually under the fee-for-service MA
    program in Wisconsin.

13
The WDA asks the Legislature to prioritize dental
funding within the state budget and increase
dental MA reimbursements to the 75th percentile.
  • Four-year-old male MA patient treated by Dr.
    McCormick in 2007.
  • Increasing rates would cost the state an
    additional 20 - 30 million in General Purpose
    Revenue (GPR) per year.
  • If approved, the state would still spend less
    than two percent of its entire MA budget on
    dental services.

14
Legislators must decide if the states poorest
citizens deserve to have two percent of the MA
budget dedicated to improving their oral health.
  • Teenage male patient of Dr. Michael Donohoo
    (Milwaukee) with dental problems caused by
    excessive soft drink consumption.
  • If legislators are unwilling to prioritize
    funding for dental access within the state
    budget, the WDA proposes fair reimbursement rates
    be provided by implementing a fee on
    distributors, manufacturers and wholesale dealers
    of soda.
  • An estimated two cents per 12-ounce can of soda
    Two Cents for Tooth Sense could generate
    approximately 70 million in additional revenue
    each year.

15
Charity is NOT an oral health care system.
  • Volunteer data collection shows an individual WDA
    dentist appears to donate 10,000 - 12,000 worth
    of care each year in addition to the free
    services he or she may provide through MA,
    Donated Dental Services, Give Kids A Smile or
    other charitable programs.

16
True oral health prevention requires a
comprehensive approach.
  • Professional diagnosis by a dentist
  • Regular dental examinations with X-rays
  • Necessary restorative and periodontal treatment
    early in the development of dental disease
  • Regular personal oral hygiene practices
  • Observance of a healthy lifestyle and dietary
    habits
  • Consumption or application of appropriate
    fluoride supplements
  • Appropriate placement of dental sealants
  • Patient education

17
Access to oral health care is a promise
Wisconsin has made to its Medicaid children and
adults.
  • It is time for the state to prioritize funding so
    the promise of dental care to Medicaid patients
    can become reality.
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