AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRIC DENTISTRY
American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry
211 East Chicago Avenue, Suite 700 • Chicago, IL 60611-2663
312-337-2169 • FAX-312-337-6329 •
Written Testimony
Submitted May 9, 2002
by the
American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry
To the
Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education and Related Agencies
Committee on Appropriations
United States House of Representatives
Paul A. Kennedy, Jr., DDS, MS
President
John S. Rutkauskas, MS, DDS, MBA
Executive Director
jrutkauskas@
The American Academy of Pediatric Dentistry (AAPD) is the membership organization representing the specialty of pediatric dentistry. Our members are the “front line” providers of oral health care to America’s children and educators of health professionals about children’s oral health.[1]
The AAPD is the recognized authority on pediatric oral health care, and is a recognized leader in several prominent areas, including: the development of pediatric dentistry clinical policies and practice guidelines (such as periodicity schedules); the dissemination of consumer information about pediatric oral health care (such as the AAPD Foundation’s Good Health Starts Here campaign that educates caregivers, adolescents and other health care professionals that oral health is an essential component of general health, and promotes methods to prevent oral disease and maintain health); and partnership with the federal government on several key pediatric oral health initiatives. Our federal partnership includes a S-CHIP Partnership Grant funded by the Health Resources and Services Administration’s (HRSA) Maternal and Child Health Bureau (MCHB) to develop and disseminate “best practices” in oral health care programs aimed at pre-school children, and a MCHB Partners in Program Planning for Adolescent Health grant that will develop oral health messages aimed at adolescents.
What is the Oral Health Status of America’s Children?
We Have Not Conquered the Disease Yet
As thoroughly documented in the 2000 U.S. Surgeon General’s Report, “Oral Health in America,” although the oral health of our nation’s children has improved dramatically over the past three decades, large pockets of children with severe dental disease and disability continue to exist in our country. Children of families with low incomes suffer more than twice the rate of tooth decay than children in middle and upper income families.[2] As highlighted in the Journal of the American Medical Association, “tooth decay is the most common chronic disease of childhood.”[3] Unmet dental needs among children are three times that of unmet medical needs. It is five times more common than asthma. In National Health Interview Surveys, parents cite dental care as the number one unmet health need of their children. Eighteen percent of 2-4 year olds have visually evident caries, and by ages 6-8, 52 percent of U.S. children have already experienced tooth decay. It is, in the words of the Surgeon General, “a silent epidemic.”
The Surgeon General reported that 80 percent of all dental disease occurs in only 25 percent of U.S. children. These children are more likely to live in low income and/or minority families and not only have increased dental disease, but more extensive disease and more treatment for pain. An estimated four to five million children are in acute dental need. The profound disparities in oral health were also discussed in the U.S. General Accounting Office’s Report “Dental Disease is a Chronic Problem Among Low-Income Populations” (April 2000).
Good oral health is inextricably linked to a child’s overall health and well-being. Poor oral health is linked to slower growth rate for toddlers and poor nutrition in children. Afflicted children experience pain and infection, and are distracted from learning. Each year, children spend over 1.1 million days sick in bed and nearly 500,000 miss school days because of an acute dental condition. Children suffering from untreated dental decay may be subject to complicating medical conditions, as well as inadequate diet and hygiene. Poor dental health in children is frequently a marker for poor overall health.
Low income, low education, minority status and lack of private or public dental insurance coverage are all associated with lower odds of having dental visits.[4] For every child in the U.S. that lacks medical insurance, 2.6 lack dental insurance.[5] Children who do not receive regular dental check-ups often end up seeking expensive hospital emergency room care. One-third of all children seeking emergency care for toothaches have abscessed teeth. For many of these children, the emergency room is their first trip to the “dentist.” This is unfortunate, as a study of Louisiana’s dental Medicaid system found that reducing early childhood caries through early intervention could provide substantial costs savings as compared to hospitalization (an estimated $104 per patient compared to $1,508 ). A study of the Texas Medicaid Dental program found that the reimbursement amount for patients admitted to the hospital (for episodic, non-definitive care) was ten times greater than the anticipated amount for preventive care.[6]
This testimony represents the AAPD’s requests for FY 2003 health and human services appropriations, supporting programs that significantly promote the oral health of our nation’s children. These requests are also strongly supported by the American Dental Association, American Dental Education Association, and the Children’s Dental Health Project, among others.
AAPD Recommendation 1: Provide $15 million in FY 2003 for the HRSA Title VII Pediatric and General Dentistry Training program.
This will help address the nationwide shortage of Pediatric Dentists, and is consistent with the recommendations of the HRSA Advisory Committee on Training in Primary Care Medicine and Dentistry in its November 2001 report.
Children with more advanced disease are more likely to require the services of a specialist in pediatric dentistry. Pediatric dentists provide more complete and less sporadic care to Medicaid and SCHIP patients, and are especially successful with this population because of their advanced clinical training and expertise in behavior management .[7] The two-year Pediatric Dentistry residency program, taken after graduation from dental school, immerses the dentist in scientific study enhanced with clinical experience. This training is the dental counterpart to general pediatrics. Only 3% of all dentists are pediatric dentists, yet pediatric dentists provide approximately 30 percent of oral health care services for children in the U.S., and treat a disproportionate percentage of Medicaid, SCHIP, medically compromised, and disabled children.
The U.S. is not training enough pediatric dentists to meet the increasing need for pediatric oral health care services. Because of increased attention to this problem, there has been a thirty percent increase in first year positions over the past seven years, but this is just a small dent in the overall need. Furthermore, 47 percent of all applicants to pediatric dentistry training positions for 2002-2003 were turned away due to a lack of positions. Some training programs have 25 times the number of applicants that can be accommodated.
Pediatric dentists are needed not only to treat children but also to train general dentists to provide pediatric services. Many positions for pediatric dentists remain open in private practice, public health clinics, dental schools, residency training programs, corporate employment, and government service. Our nation must increase the number of practicing pediatric dentists dramatically in order to have any hope of improving the oral health status of underserved children.
The authority to fund Pediatric Dentistry Residency training under Title VII was enacted under the Health Professions Education Partnerships Act of 1998. This expanded the existing General Dentistry training authority, providing three year “start up” funds to either increase Pediatric Dentistry positions at existing programs or initiate new programs. Title VII support from the HRSA Bureau of Health Professions is critical to expanding this training in the future. In the first two years of funding (FY 2000 and FY 2001) a total of approximately $2.7 million was allocated to 14 programs. However, 11 programs were approved but un-funded. Every program that can be funded is critical, as Pediatric Dentistry residency programs provide a significant amount of care to under-served populations. Two-thirds of the patients treated in Pediatric Dentistry residency programs are Medicaid recipients.
AAPD Recommendation 2: Provide $20 million in FY 2003 for a LINE ITEM for HRSA Oral Health Initiatives, and $17 million in FY 2003 for Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) programs for water fluoridation and school-based sealants. The provisions highlighted below were authorized under the Children’s Health Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-310). These efforts to eliminate the disparities in oral health status and assure access to oral health services for low-income children were also supported in FY 2002 committee report language:
HRSA MCHB Innovative Oral Health Activities. HRSA was authorized to: provide up to $10 million annually for innovative oral health activities that improve the oral health of low income children under six; increase the utilization of dental services by such children; and decrease the incidence of early childhood caries. The plan should also support expansion of the HRSA MCHB Centers for Leadership in Pediatric Dentistry Education, which are responsible for developing leading educators and researchers in this field.
Community-based Research. MCHB and the Indian Health Service, in consultation with the CDC and the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), were authorized to support community-based research designed to: improve understanding of the development, diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of pediatric oral disease in high risk populations; support demonstrations of preventive interventions in high risk populations including nutrition, parenting, and feeding techniques; and develop clinical approaches to assess individual patients for the risk of pediatric dental disease.
Water Fluoridation. The CDC was authorized to provide grants to states and Indian tribes for community water fluoridation, including purchase of fluoridation equipment, training of engineers, development of educational materials, and infrastructure support. Also included is authority for a demonstration project to assist rural water systems in successfully implementing the water fluoridation guidelines of the CDC.
School-based Sealants. The CDC was authorized to provide grants to states and Indian tribes for school-based sealant programs in socio-economically depressed urban and rural areas.
AAPD Recommendation 3: Fund new initiatives to improve pediatric oral health services for low-income families.
A recent study in the journal of Pediatric Dentistry found disproportionate little spending on low-income and minority children in Medicaid dental programs, and surprisingly high levels of out-of-pocket expenditures given that Medicaid prohibits cost-sharing. Fully 40 cents of every dollar expended on dental care for poor children was paid out of pocket![8] New authorizations being considered by Congress include Medicaid improvement grants as contained in the proposed Children’s Dental Health Improvement Act of 2002 (S. 1626, H.R. 3659). This would encourage other states to attempt innovative reforms such as the Michigan Healthy Kids Dental Program[9]. Innovative oral health access grants to states are also included in the Health Care Safety Net Amendments of 2001 (S. 1533) as approved by the Senate on April 16, 2002. These proposals are a response to problems highlighted in the U.S. General Accounting Office Report “Factors Contributing to Low Use of Dental Services by Low-Income Populations” (September 2000).
AAPD Recommendation 4: Continue to support Medicaid dental leadership by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)
We appreciate the committee’s FY 2002 report language urging CMS to establish a permanent Chief Dental Officer position so that oral health expertise and oversight in the agency will continue. This position is especially significant in providing planning and technical support for CMS to spur innovative reforms at the state level, and effectively oversee the Medicaid dental program. This matter should continue to be monitored for implementation. CMS should also be encouraged to follow-up to state responses to the January 18, 2001 CMS letter to State Medicaid Directors (targeted to improving access in states with oral health care Medicaid patient utilization below 30 percent). Finally, CMS should be urged to promptly release the revised Guide to Children’s Dental Care in Medicaid, which updates an outdated manual over 20 years old and no longer relevant to contemporary pediatric oral health care.
Conclusion
The AAPD thanks the subcommittee for the opportunity to present these recommendations to improve children’s oral health.
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[1] The Academy’s 4,800 members serve as primary care providers for millions of children from infancy through adolescence; provide advanced, specialty-level care for infants, children, adolescents, and patients with special health care needs in private offices, clinics, and hospital settings; and are the primary contributors to professional education programs and scholarly works concerning dental care for children. Individuals trained in Pediatric Dentistry learn advanced, diagnostic, and surgical procedures; child psychology and clinical management; oral pathology; pharmacology related to the child; radiology; child development; management of oral-facial trauma; caring for patients with special health care needs; conscious sedation; and general anesthesia. Since children’s oral health is an important part of overall health, pediatric dentists often work with pediatricians, other physicians, and dental specialists.
[2] The Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) showed that dental decay is experienced by 30 percent of children 2-5 years old and 40 percent of children 6-12 years old from families with incomes below 100 percent of the federal poverty level.
[3] Mouradian W, Wehr E, Crall J: Disparities in children’s oral health and access to dental care. JAMA 284: 2625-2631, 2000.
[4] Edelstein B, Manski R, Moeller J: Pediatric dental visits during 1996: an analysis of the federal Medical Expenditure Panel Survey. Pediatric Dentistry 22: 17-20, 2000.
[5] Vargas CM, Isman RE, Crall, JJ. Comparison of children’s medical and dental insurance coverage by sociodemographic characteristics, US, 1995. J Public Health Dent 2002; 62: 38-44.
[6] Pettinato E, Webb M, Seale S: A comparison of Medicaid reimbursement for non-definitive pediatric dental treatment in the emergency room versus periodic preventive care. Pediatric Dentistry 22: 463-468, 2000.
[7] Cashion S: Children's utilization of dental care in the NC Medicaid program. Pediatric Dentistry 21:2 97-103,1999.
[8] Edelstein B, Manski R, Moeller J: Child dental expenditures: 1996. Pediatric Dentistry 24: 11-17, 2002.
[9] The Michigan Healthy Kids Dental (HKD) program was initially launched in 22 counties and has been expanded to 37 counties, with plans for further expansion to at least 80 of Michigan’s 83 counties. Area dentists have responded positively to two notable program features: administration of the plan by Delta Dental of Michigan and reimbursement rates that pay 100% of dentists’ charges up to plan limits (approximately the 75th percentile of area fees). A study assessing the first 12 months indicated that utilization of services dramatically increased, from 18% to 44% of eligible children, closing 50% of the “gap” between utilization of dental services by Medicaid children and those covered by Delta commercial plans. The number of area dentists participating in Medicaid increased over 300%, providing greater geographic access to services. Travel distances for families were cut in half. Once their initial treatment needs are met, HKD children are returning for maintenance care with treatment costs dropping to levels comparable to commercially insured children.
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