Home | Health & Science News | Shifting dental care to the ER could further decay budget

Shifting dental care to the ER could further decay budget

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image Under the governor's plan, this could be your new dentist's chair. Morguefile photo.

Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty proposes eliminating dental care programs for all adults saying they can go to the emergency room for their dental-related severe pain, trauma or infections instead. The Minnesota Dental Association suggests that will be quite costly.

Budget cuts to state dental care programs proposed by Gov. Tim Pawlenty will be a costly shift that will end up costing state taxpayers more, say Minnesota dentists.

The governor has proposed eliminating dental care for adults receiving General Assistance, Medical Assistance, MinnesotaCare, and the Critical Access Provider Payment Program, and replacing it with an ER care program on Jan. 1, 2010.

Non-pregnant adults would continue to receive emergency dental care through hospital emergency departments for emergencies such as severe pain, trauma or infections,” states the budget proposal on page 102.

There’s just one problem.

Hospital emergency rooms aren’t set up as dentist’s offices. They can supply patients with pain medications for tooth aches and antibiotics for dental infections but they don’t extract teeth. “They can’t actually perform dental procedures so there will be repeated visits,” says Tom Day, director of legislative affairs for the Minnesota Dental Association (MDA).

“It’s a short-term cut to make the budget work but it will significantly increase visits to the ER,” Day said. “We are absolutely opposed to the cuts.”

About 20,000 uninsured people visited emergency rooms for dental care in 2008, according to the MDA.  About 7,400 of those dental-related ER visits were to Hennepin County Medical Center and at $450 to $550 per visit, cost the state millions of dollars in medical billings, according to Dr. Anthony J. DiAngelis, chief of dentistry at HCMC and a professor at the University of Minnesota School of Dentistry, writing recently in MinnPost.

Instead of following other states that have cut or never supported  dental care, Minnesota should support its current set of programs, said Day. Other states pay much more in emergency room visits for dental care than Minnesota, he added.

Those visits are expected to climb along with the numbers of troubled industries and continuing lay-offs. The state lost nearly 75,000 jobs last year. In just the first two months of this year, 32,000 Minnesotans have been laid off from their jobs, according to the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED). With jobs go access to affordable health care.

“Governor Pawlenty’s proposed budget cuts will further restrict access to oral health care at a time families need it the most,” said MDA President Dr. Lee Jess in a statement

MDA has expressed its strong reservations about the proposed cuts to the governor and legislators. House and Senate health committees are listening and agree that the cuts go too far, Day said. Some legislators have proposed maintaining coverage for certain procedures to be used in the most serious health situations.

While medical specialists have traditionally fought to prevent legislators from prioritizing treatments, the future prospects for dental health in the state are looking so dire that mandating specific procedures into state law could be a necessary compromise in order to preserve critical services. Mandating coverage for the most critical care procedures “still doesn’t go far enough, but it’s a move in the right direction,” said Day.

Several bills that address dental care are still being hammered out in committees, and then they will be negotiated in conference committees before they are sent to the governor – where they are subject to a veto.

MDA has not complained about the cuts without offering some solutions for saving on dental care costs. It advocates a single ”dental home” that would administer payments for services, rather than the dozen different companies now administering payments.

The present system adds costly overhead and is “a nightmare for the dentist,” said Day, because it forces dentists to deal with 10 to 13 different programs and types of paperwork.

MDA has more than 3,000 members across the state, representing about 81 percent of licensed dentists in Minnesota.

Subscribe to comments feed Comments (7 posted):

Kat on 17/04/2009 18:06:30
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More on the national trends in dental care and ER visits:

A Healthy Blog: http://blog.hcfama.org/?p=2742
theagle.com: http://tinyurl.com/dj4wzn
University of Mich. Health System: http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/548867/
Oregnlive.om http://tinyurl.com/dkqxd5
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Gem on 19/04/2009 21:58:04
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It is not practical going to emergency rooms nowadays because it is too costly. The parents should help and teach their kids on how to take care of their teeth in order to avoid spending a lot of money.
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gannie on 19/04/2009 22:37:05
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Besides having now to pay for very, very, very costly Emergency room bills for a simple cavity, that turns in to a very costly infection..
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Gary L. Grimm D.D.S. on 30/05/2009 13:58:11
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Dental work needs to be done in the dental office. ER's are already swamped!
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Cynthia on 18/11/2009 21:49:56
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Poligrip, Fixodent, and other denture creams have been linked to neurological and other problems. This site has some good information and recourse options: http://www.denturecreamlawyer.com/
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Emergency Dental on 01/12/2009 11:35:38
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This is just a waste of tax payer's money. ER is not set up to do any dental treatment. They will only prescrive medication and patients will just keep coming back.
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applemint tee on 05/01/2010 20:40:17
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This is such an important issue. With a small investment in preventive dental care, we could save enormous amounts of money on chronic cardiovascular diseases (and acute episodes) that are clearly linked to dental infections.
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