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Boston Globe November 11, 1999
City to launch battle against dental 'crisis'
By Dolores Kong, Globe Staff
With a study estimating that the number of untreated cavities among
Boston students greatly exceeds the national average, public health
officials are about to launch an offensive against what they say
is a growing dental crisis in the city.
Other signs of the crisis include a number of infants from Roxbury
and Dorchester with baby-bottle tooth decay, frequent calls to the
Mayor's Health Line from people looking for dental care, a decline
in the number of dentists serving the neediest patients, and the
recent closing of a neighborhood dental clinic.
Things have gotten so bad, public health officials and patient advocates
plan to hold a community hearing next month on the oral health needs
of Greater Boston, to raise awareness among state legislators and
the public.
Already city health officials are considering adding new preventive
dental care methods, including sealants to reduce cavities, to services
available through a new 40-foot public health van that makes regular
rounds in Boston.
While Boston's water supply has contained tooth-decay fighting fluoride
since 1978, city officials say the scope of the problem reflects
gaps in insurance coverage and access to dental-care providers.
''The lack of accessible dental care is a major health crisis for
residents of the city,'' said John Auerbach, executive director
of the Boston Public Health Commission. ''The problem is a complicated
mix of people who are uninsured, people who are underinsured, a
lack of providers who are willing to serve people who are on Medicaid,
and inadequate reimbursement for health care providers.''
According to statistics cited in the city's latest annual health
report, ''The Health of Boston 1999'':
Eighteen percent of children 4 years old and younger who were seen
in the pediatric program at Tufts University School of Dental Medicine
in 1995 had baby-bottle tooth decay, a painful condition that arises
when a baby is given a bottle of juice or milk at bedtime. Treatment
can cost up to $4,000 per child.
About 90 percent of 107 Boston high school students were found to
need dental treatment, according to a 1996 unpublished study. That
report also estimated that the city's students had four times more
untreated cavities than the national average, although there were
no details about whether that might be a result of differences in
demographics, insurance coverage, or availability of dentists.
Dental care was the second most requested specific health service
on the Mayor's Health Line, behind primary care, between 1995 and
1998. (Outpacing requests for specific health services like primary
and dental care, however, were the phone calls from people seeking
general health insurance coverage.)
Homeless children in Boston have a much higher rate of untreated
tooth decay in permanent teeth than the New England average - nearly
eight times higher, according to a 1994 survey of 114 homeless children,
age 3 months to 17 years old.
In 1997, a screening of 88 elementary school students in Dorchester
found that 44 percent had obvious tooth decay and 11 percent had
gum disease. ''These are second-graders,'' said Emily Feinberg,
a nurse practitioner at Dorchester House who coordinated the screening.
While many of these children had dental coverage through Medicaid,
they may have been unable to find a provider who would take the
insurance or get a timely appointment, she said. There is no school
requirement for annual dental screenings and there are no dental
clinics at Boston schools, according to Feinberg.
Despite this crisis, the number of dental-care providers serving
the neediest in Boston and around the state is shrinking.
Just this summer, a Jamaica Plain dental clinic that served 3,000
patients a year closed as a result of too-low insurance reimbursement
rates. The clinic, based at Martha Eliot Health Center, was getting
at most 38 cents for every dollar charged.
And out of 4,700 dentists in Massachusetts, fewer than 800 take
patients with Medicaid, now known as MassHealth, according to statistics
cited by the Massachusetts League of Community Health Centers.
Other states, particularly Connecticut and New York, have begun
to combat growing dental problems among young people by putting
dental offices inside the schools.
All this evidence, plus testimony from patients, outreach workers,
parents and providers, will be presented at a Dec. 7 hearing to
address the crisis, beginning at 3 p.m. at Brookside Community Health
Center in Jamaica Plain. The hearing is co-sponsored by health centers,
the city public health commission, and the Boston-based consumer
advocacy group Health Care for All.
This story ran on page A01 of the Boston Globe on 11/27/99.
© Copyright 1999 Globe Newspaper Company.
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