Showing posts with label ADA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADA. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

Advocacy Efforts Encourage U.S. Treasury to Address Pediatric Dental


Earlier this month, the U.S. Department of Treasury released a proposed rule clarifying that pediatric dental benefits should be part of the calculation for marketplace tax credits. If implemented, this rule will be a major victory for low-income families in need of access to affordable dental coverage for their children.

Pediatric dental coverage is one of the 10 essential health benefits for marketplace plans that are subsidized based on income level under the Affordable Care Act (ACA).

Unfortunately, the cost of pediatric dental coverage is often not included in the total subsidy amount that roughly 85 percent of those purchasing coverage through the marketplace receive to help pay for the total cost of coverage for their family.

Without the full subsidy to cover all 10 essential health benefits promised under the ACA, many families struggle to get access to dental coverage for their children.

And Congress noticed.

A few months ago, Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) took the lead with a group of Senators who co-signed a letter urging the Treasury to make sure that the advanced premium tax credits under the ACA accounts for the cost of pediatric dental benefits.

The National Association of Dental Plans (NADP) and Delta Dental Plans Association (DDPA) led a coalition of organizations, including DentaQuest, to garner support for Sen. Stabenow’s efforts on this issue.

So, what’s changed for pediatric dental benefits?

The latest proposed rule ensures pediatric dental is included in the subsidy calculation for all families. 

Once finalized, this rule will mean that more families have the financial support they need to get the coverage they need to #ExpectOralHealth.

Industry advocates resoundingly supported the announcement. The American Dental Association (ADA), the Children’s Dental Health Project (CDHP), DDPA, and NADP released a joint press release applauding it.

For young children, early dental care is especially important, and this decision will help make dental coverage more affordable for families in Michigan and across the country.”

As policies aimed at improving access and affordability continue to evolve, it is equally critical that they are implemented effectively. We are pleased to see the Treasury Department taking steps to ensure that low-income children get access to the dental coverage they need to lead productive, healthy lives. 


As health care continues to undergo significant changes, oral health is too important to be forgotten. 

Friday, January 27, 2012

Let’s Focus on Quality, not Quantity

By Mark Doherty, DMD, Executive Director, DentaQuest Institute

It’s hard to miss the fact that our health care system is in the middle of a lot of change. I read about “pay for performance,” “accountable care organizations” and “value-based care” all the time. Oral health is not usually part of the discussion but that won’t be for long. The growing cost of care, the variation in treatments and care outcomes and the significant disparities faced by disadvantaged groups are important issues for dental care delivery too.

So I am very excited by the strong interest and motivation among my peers to find opportunities to focus on quality rather than quantity in America’s oral health care delivery system. I just returned from a meeting in Washington, D.C. with leaders in oral health and health care from across the care delivery spectrum (ADA, ADEA, CDHP, ADHA, CDC, HRSA, IHI, CMS, dental educators, providers, hospitals, health policy experts, insurers and more) where quality improvement and accountability were the central topics. Folks left the meeting ready to take part in this Quality Journey.

The impetus for the meeting was a new report (just released), edited by Paul Glassman DDS, MA, MBA, professor of dental practice and director of the Pacific Center for Special Care at the University of the Pacific Arthur A. Dugoni School of Dentistry. The report, Oral Health Quality Improvement in the Era of Accountability, is a call for a new dialogue on how to improve quality and increase access to affordable dental care.

Until now, the limited evidence of best practice for most dental procedures has led to widespread variation in clinical decisions among dentists; [Read the blog post, To Fill or Not to Fill by my colleague Dr. Doyle Williams to understand the variability in treatment approaches.] And today, there are few incentives to implement quality improvement programs.

But we need to. Dental expenses are now one of the highest out-of-pocket health costs for consumers. And 37 percent of African American children and 41 percent of Hispanic children have untreated tooth decay, compared to 25 percent of white children. The disparity is unacceptable.

Take a close look at the ideas in this report. We need to look at the opportunities to do better.

At the DentaQuest Institute, we’re emphasizing prevention and disease management in our quality improvement initiatives. The good news is that this approach works. When we apply a disease management model to the care of a chronic disease like Early Childhood Caries (ECC), we are seeing longer-term improvements in the patient’s oral health.

The DentaQuest Institute will post the presentations from the meeting in Washington on our website.

This is an exciting time for those of us who are passionate about better oral health for all.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Rating the Performance of Your State’s Health System

There’s an interesting new report by the Commonwealth Fund, Securing a Healthy Future: The Commonwealth Fund State Scorecard on Child Health System Performance, 2011 that is worth looking at.

The Commonwealth Fund’s researchers took a number of objective measures for good health -- such as access to prevention and treatment, the potential to lead a healthy life (defined as factors such as low prevalence of specific health problems, low obesity, and lack of habits and behaviors that impact health, such as smoking) and socio-demographic dimensions (such as income and where you live) -- and looked at how each of these measures impact the others. The result is a very interesting and comprehensive picture of elements that contribute to children's health in each state.

We’re pleased that this report includes preventive dental care and the absence of dental problems as measures of access to prevention and treatment and a factor in healthy lives. The Report concludes that the high rate of poor yet preventable dental health outcomes among children in many states points to the need to improve preventive dental health care.

Better access to oral health services can reduce tooth decay and lead to a better quality of life for children, as well as reduce financial and societal costs. The Commonwealth Fund found that almost one third of children did not see a dentist for a preventive visit in the bottom-ranked state and more than 10 percent did not have a dental check-up in the top-ranked state. Want to know who they are? Click the link on the report title and check out the report!

Dental disease is nearly 100% preventable when people have access to information about keeping their mouths healthy and access to dental services. Public education, expansion of access to dental care, and integration of oral health into routine well-child care are smart ways to do this.

It works best when FAMILIES are able get the services they need to maintain their oral health since parents need dental care themselves for their own good health AND so they can be a good example for their children. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Healthy People 2010 goals recommend that children have at least 1 dental visit annually. And the American Dental Association says that you can start this at the age of 1 or when the first tooth erupts.

So, check out the data for your state. And then let me ask you -- is an annual visit to the dentist something that you do for yourself and for your children?

Friday, February 25, 2011

Using Performance Measurement to Improve Oral Health and Patient Care


This week, I have the pleasure of recognizing my colleague Dr. Rob Compton, who was recently appointed to the American Dental Association’s (ADA) Dental Quality Alliance (DQA) Advisory Committee on Research and Development of Performance Measures.

Dr. Compton, vice president of quality improvement for DentaQuest, is a nationally recognized expert on evidence-based oral health care and cost management methodologies. In 1999, Dr. Compton opened DentaQuest’s model dental office in Massachusetts. Its goal has been to deliver cost-effective, appropriate dental care using scientific, evidence-based technologies and treatments that are tailored to the dental needs of each patient. Today, under the direction of Dr. Peter Blanchard, the DentaQuest Oral Health Center is a thriving multi-specialty dental office—and the American Dental Association’s Adult Preventive Practice of the Year. Disease management and patient education are at the heart of its business and clinical systems. And for patients, that means healthier mouths, keeping their teeth for life, and much less need to drill and fill. The DentaQuest Oral Health Center has become a model for other dental offices who want to emphasize disease management in patient care.

Dr. Compton has brought the same thoughtful care and attention to quality improvement for better patient outcomes to DentaQuest’s dental benefit plan designs. He has encouraged DentaQuest to cover new services once they have been shown to have real impact on slowing the progression of dental and gum disease, particularly in higher-risk patients. His appointment to this ADA committee is acknowledgement of DentaQuest’s role as a major stakeholder and subject matter expert in high quality oral health benefits that emphasize cost and quality and which lead to improved patient outcomes.

The DQA was established by the American Dental Association in 2008 at the request of the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) which is also a co-sponsor. Its mission is to advance performance measurement as a means to improve oral health and patient care and safety through a consensus-building process.