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Maine has shortage of dentists
By ALAN CROWELL
Staff Writer
Kennebec Journal & Morning Sentinel Sunday, February 18, 2007

BINGHAM -- Three years ago, Kristi Thomas fell over the handlebars of her bike and knocked her front teeth loose.

It was not an unusual accident for an active 9-year-old, but because Kristi has no regular access to dental care, it changed her life.

Kristi was able to receive emergency dental care largely because of the intervention of her family physician, Dr. Cynthia Robertson, who spent hours locating a dentist.

A few months after those emergency visits, however, Kristi's grandmother, Pamela Thomas, received a letter from the clinic that stated Kristi needed care for a possibly cracked jaw and her injured teeth.

Years later, those problems still have not been addressed, and Kristi's teeth are crooked and uneven. A front tooth is turning yellow.

"She needs a lot more work on the front teeth and we just can't get anybody," Pamela said. "Nobody wants to accept new patients on medical cards from (the state)."

Kristi is not alone.

There's a nationwide shortage of dentists, one that's especially acute in rural areas like Somerset County. And the problem is made worse by poor reimbursement rates for dental care by MaineCare, the state's Medicaid program.

The result: Children like Kristi suffer from infections and other dental problems that can affect their ability to concentrate in school and even the way they see themselves.

About half of the patients at the Bingham Area Health Clinic, which serves a rural population in a county with the lowest number of dentists per person in the state, have significant dental decay, said Robertson.

"It is heartbreaking. It is more than frustrating," said Robertson.

Medical research has linked dental infections to chronic health problems, including diabetes and heart problems.

Robertson also worries about the self-esteem problems suffered by patients and how they will affect them over a lifetime.

"I had one young woman who is the mother of three say 'I can't go apply for a job because I can't smile,'" said Robertson.

Robertson, who travels to the Dominican Republic every year to provide medical care in isolated villages, said Maine doesn't look especially good in comparison.

"When you look inside the mouth of somebody from rural Maine, it doesn't look terribly different from what you see in the Third World," she said.

Robertson wants to address the problem. She said staff at the health clinic may begin to apply a fluoride coating to children's teeth and a community group is also raising money for a new dental clinic.

The Bingham Health Council, a group of volunteers that also raised the money to build the new health center, has $90,000 so far and needs another $300,000.

A well-equipped clinic, she said, might make it easier to attract a dentist.

An established professional may be drawn to the area for the rural lifestyle. A recent graduate could qualify for federal help in paying back his or her dental school loans by working in an underserved area, she said.

Robert Weyant, chairman of the Department of Dental Public Health at the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine, said the problem of access to dental care is not unique to Maine.

"Pennsylvania lost 5 percent of their dentists in the past five years, but if you look in the rural areas, they have lost 10 percent," he said.

Nationally, said Weyant, there are probably many rural areas that don't have access and won't get it unless something fundamentally changes in the way dental care is financed.

"We could be in a real crisis," he said.

About 5,000 dentists retire every year, said Weyant, while only around 4,000 begin their careers.

Ironically, even the use of fluoride in public water supplies has played a part in the problem.

Decades ago, as people aged they often lost all their teeth and stopped requiring dental care.

Now, with people keeping their teeth longer, there is increased demand for dental care from the elderly -- another group that tends to have little or no dental insurance.

With the average debt for dental school graduates around $141,000, according to the American Dental Association -- $200,000 or more is not uncommon -- new dentists are under pressure to start their careers in locations where they will make enough money to pay off their debt.

In the year 2000 there were 47.6 dentists for every 100,000 Mainers, compared to the national average of 63.3, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

For dentists like Dr. Jonathan Shenkin, that means plenty of patients, but many with insurance that pays only a fraction of the cost of the services they need.

Shenkin, a pediatric dentist who practices in Bangor, said he provides care to MaineCare patients because it is the right thing to do.

To offer care to MaineCare patients, dentists have to charge patients with private insurance more, and that is not fair, he said.

The problem is largely that there is no financial incentive for dentists to provide care to MaineCare patients, particularly the preventative care that is most cost effective, said Shenkin.

MaineCare reimbursement rates for dental care are low.

According to the MaineCare Benefits Manual, MaineCare will pay only $13 toward a checkup for a child, and only $20 toward treatment of a toothache. MaineCare will pay $150 toward the cost of a comprehensive oral exam for a child -- but once, and only once.

Too often, Shenkin said, he can spot his MaineCare patients by their black or missing teeth and red swollen gums.

About 90 percent of the children he takes to the operating room are MaineCare children, he said.

"They are there because they don't have access to early preventative care," said Shenkin.

Shenkin said that a much more cost effective approach is to offer preventative care at the earliest possible age. Early application of fluoride varnish, for example, can reduce decay by 40 to 50 percent, he said.

"If we let these teeth just continue to fall out, the risk of future disease escalates," he said.

In rural areas the situation is dire and not likely to improve, largely because of the difficulty dentists have in getting paid for their services, according to Dr. Wendy Wolf, president and chief executive officer of Maine Health Access Foundation.

"Folks in rural areas tend to be older, have less insurance and be less capable of paying for dental services out of pocket," she said.

Federal health insurance provides little or, in some cases, no reimbursement for dental care.

"I think it is becoming more and more challenging to make your living as a provider in a rural area," said Wolf.

The problem, said Wolf, is not just creating more clinics but finding a way to make sure dentists can make enough to stay there.

"You build it and (patients) will come but there is nobody to open the door," she said.

Alan Crowell -- 474-9534, Ext. 342

acrowell@centralmaine.com


Reader comments

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Esprit64 of N Yarmouth, ME
May 10, 2008 4:02 PM
We've passed the threshhold of common sense and have allowed anyone to charge as much as they want for any product or service today. There is absolutely no credible basis for charging the exhorbitant fees charged by dental practitioners today. The "entitlement and indebtedness" argument that dentists whine because they invested time and money in their education has lost its logic long ago. Government is supposed to exist to serve the public good first, our government's wealth is staggering, it was meant to serve the good of all, not the few who make it worth our government's while. Out of 30 industrialized countries in the world, the US is the only country without universal healthcare. If government did its job and kept control of the taxpayers' financial pie so that everyone got an equal piece, there would still be cash left over for those "better" than the rest to live the lives they believe they are entitled to. It's when government fails its people, when it becomes corrupted, the playing field is no longer fair, it is fixed, and vulnerable people are harvested and milled for whatever assets they have. Once picked clean, there's always another patient to harvest and throw away.

Our governments do not serve us. We send our tax money to government expecting fiduciary responsibility. However, we get back waste, mismanagement--and no access to the very tax money that government workers, through their unions, make sure they get for themselves.

Enough.

Our founders created this government knowing full well that one day, it would be taken over by corporations and people would be damned. Well, that day has arrived. Our founders did a fairly good job of creating this government. However, they forgot one thing. They forgot to give taxpayers directions to the government's "off-switch." Personally, I believe our government is presently so damaged, I do not believe it is salvageable.report abuse
2thGuy of Augusta, ME
Feb 19, 2007 10:33 AM
Regardless of what you choose to believe, face the facts. 1. There is a shortage of Dentists in the State of Maine. And if you think it’s a problem now wait another 5 or ten years. 58% of Maine Dentists are age 55 or older. Maine is losing two dentists through retirement for every one that moves into this state….do the math. 2. It costs between $150,000. and $200,000. to graduate from dental school and another $200,000. to purchase the equipment and start a dental practice. 3. If you are a provider of oral health services to children with MaineCare you lose money on every child that you see due to the State of Maine’s very low reimbursement rate for dental services. If you are starting your career at age 28 you are already almost half a million dollars in debt. You have to see a lot of folks before you pay off what you owe and can start making any profit for you and your family.

The State of Maine is absolutely ridiculous in their assumption that a dentist would willingly choose to go further in debt by providing services to folks with MaineCare. The Dentists are not to blame for not providing services; most of the dental practices are already operating at full capacity. The Department of Health and Human Services is not to blame for the low reimbursement rate….the people of Maine are. The government works for us, we elect the folks that make the rules. Wake up Mainers, there’s nobody to blame but you.
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jh of someplace, ME
Feb 19, 2007 9:01 AM
The cost of dental care is outrageous. A couple of years ago I had a cleaning (which the office divided into 2 visits at double the charge) and 4 fillings done. The total was at over $1000!! Fortunately, I had insurance and only paid a small fraction of the cost.
My big problem with dental/medical health is not only the cost, but physicians who only accept certain insurances (most now do not accept mainecare). I understand dentists/physicians need to make enough to pay overhead and to live, but come on--I know one physician who makes 300,000/yr and it's christmas everyday for him and his family. He's definitely not hurting--and he could afford to accept Mainecare pt's--but doesn't.
Whatever happened to the Hippocratic Oath and doing what's right for the community? I applaud Shenkin above for doing "the right thing."
Maine isn't off the hook, either. The state should do more to provide preventative care to those without or with poor insurance, and it should also provide a better reimbursement through it's own health programs.report abuse
WolfWarrior of Waterville, ME
Feb 18, 2007 11:36 PM
Living in the state of Maine is like living in the Dark Ages. There may be a "sortage" of dentists but to say that "there is no financial incentive for dentists to provide care to MaineCare patients" is a cop-out.

I can't find a dentist or doctor willing to take me on as a new patient and I pay CASH and have an excellent credit rating. What's their excuse? The doctors and dentists in this state are only interested in people with "Commercial" insurance like BC/BS so they can gouge the insurance companies and charge exorbitant prices for ordinary services.

When you walk in to any doctors office there is always a sign stating that "services must be paid for at the time they are administered". If I'm WILLING and ABLE to pay, either with CASH or a CREDIT CARD, then why should I be denied service?

I've lived in other states and have never been in a state where people with State medical insurance, or for that matter people without insurance, are left untreated for a lack of money. They may not get premium service but emergency service is always available as well as clinics for the more routine services.

Unfortunately these health care professionals can't be sued for DISCRIMINATION (which is exactly what this is) because they are private corporations and allowed to set their own standards.

However, this is also the fault of the people in Maine themselves for not standing up, mobilizing and fighting for better treatment. You don't have to be rich to be heard.

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