Dentists In Maine Fight Insurance Cuts For Kids

In Maine, some dentists are fighting the cuts in kids’ dental insurance plans. Maine insurance companies will no longer cover the recommended two fluoride treatments a year, and instead cover just one.

About a year or so ago, some dentists in Maine started noticing that insurance plans were cutting back on preventive coverage for kids. Instead of paying for the two fluoride treatments a year recommended for most children by dental associations, many insurers would only cover one. This has dentists like Whitney Wignall riled up–and taking the fight to restore coverage for fluoride treatments to the State House.

First, she just has to finish painting fluoride varnish on 6-year-old Moria Concannon’s teeth. “All right, I’m going to dry it off with a little bit of air first, OK? And just stay open for me,” she says.

Wignall works at Southern Maine Pediatric Dentistry in South Portland. Concannon’s mother is willing to pay the extra money for her daughter to have more than the one treatment their insurance will cover. But Wignall says that’s often not the case.

“A lot of parents decline having it done, and they say, my insurance doesn’t cover it, I only want it once a year,” she says. “They feel like, well the insurance company knows what’s actually necessary, you’re trying to do something extra.”

This week, legislators will take up a bill that would require insurers to pay for two fluoride treatments per child annually, and up to four treatments for children with… continue reading

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Queensland Children Have Bad Teeth

In Queensland, Australia, nearly half of children aged five to 12 have some form of tooth decay. The average child is also likely to have an average of three affected teeth.

Nearly half of all Queenslanders aged five to 12 years suffered from tooth decay, a report into children’s dental health has found.

The Australian Institute of Health and Wellbeing report Child Dental Health Surveys Australia, 2005 and 2006, released yesterday, found 45.4 per cent of Queensland children utilising public dental services suffered from tooth decay in either their baby or adult teeth.

The state’s record compares unfavourably to the rest of the surveyed states, with only the Northern Territory having a higher instance of decay (47.1 per cent).

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It also found the average Queensland child aged five to six years was likely to have nearly three (2.74) of their teeth affected by decay.

Queensland children’s poor dental health was highlighted last year when an Ipswich woman was jailed for 12 months for only feeding her nine-year-old daughter cordial.

The girl needed to have 12 teeth extracted.

The studies predate the state government’s move to add fluoride to the Queensland water supply.

A lack of exposure to fluoride is named in the study as one of the risk factors for dental decay, along with the intake of… continue reading

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