Dental crisis in the US: 20 percent of Americans have lost their teeth

One in five older adults in the US have lost their teeth. There is a dental care crisis. Jessica Glenza interviews Bernie Sanders for her piece in the Guardian on the need to improve dental care as part of fixing our broken health care system.

Senator Sanders has introduced a bill in the Senate to expand Medicare dental benefits and improve them in Medicaid. The bill also gives dental benefits to veterans through the Veterans Administration.

Traditional Medicare does not cover dental care. Medicare Advantage plans sometimes offer limited dental benefits, but they are so limited that people in Medicare Advantage face the same dental issues as people in Traditional Medicare.

Half of adults in the US have gum disease. Sixty nine million adults have no dental insurance and those who do often have limited coverage. Out-of-pocket costs with insurance are high. Most people can’t afford dental bills that are several thousand dollars.

Two million Americans went to the hospital because of tooth pain in 2019. Nearly half a million other people went abroad for lower-cost dental care.  Dental care is much less costly in Mexico.

Having bad teeth can cause serious health issues, including malnutrition. It can be emotionally and psychologically destructive.

Senator Sanders says that expanding dental coverage in the US is a political winner. The overwhelming majority of Americans support it. He is urging President Biden to include dental benefits in Medicare as part of his re-election platform.

For his part, President Biden has taken small steps to improve dental coverage in Medicare. For example, some cancer patients with Medicare now have some dental coverage.

Republicans continue to oppose extra Medicare benefits. They claim they are unaffordable. But, it’s all a question of government priorities. Republicans are happy to approve $900 billion in military spending and tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans.

The American Dental Association opposes a dental benefit in Medicare. It fears a large administrative burden on dentists.

Here’s more from Just Care:

Comments

One response to “Dental crisis in the US: 20 percent of Americans have lost their teeth”

  1. Andrea H Avatar
    Andrea H

    While every Reichwinger either doesn’t care what financial holes are caused by having poor insurance or no insurance–not to mention the excruciating pain, Democrats aren’t even proposing to do ANYTHING to help.
    Change starts with The People!! Never the elite or politicians. I started by calling and writing my own reps…with anger!! I have to take a 2nd mortgage out just to pay for an implant (or bridge) just because my regular dentist failed to send my case out to a specialist to retreat my failing root canal. $10K. Who has this kind of money sitting around them?
    And too many ppl have horror stories getting this work done in Mexico. Where exactly can you go in these foreign countries? I am all alone here. Horrible!

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