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Marian Wright Edelman

Marian Wright Edelman

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Deamonte Driver's Death From Toothache Grants More Kids Dental Care Access

Posted: 03/ 7/11 04:00 PM ET

Four years ago this February, an entire community was devastated in Prince George’s County, Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C., when 12-year-old seventh grader Deamonte Driver died after complications from a tooth abscess. His mother Alyce, who worked at low-paying jobs, had searched for a dentist to treat Deamonte’s toothache who would accept Medicaid, but she was unsuccessful. Ultimately, Alyce took Deamonte to a hospital emergency room, where he was given medicine for a headache, sinusitis, and a dental abscess and sent home. But his condition soon took a turn for the worse, and he was back at the hospital being rushed to surgery where it was discovered that bacteria from his abscessed tooth had spread to his brain. Heroic efforts were made to save him, including two operations and eight weeks of additional care and therapy totaling about $250,000, but it was all too late. Deamonte died on February 25, 2007 -- when his life could have been saved by a routine dental visit and an $80 tooth extraction.

Tooth decay is the single most common chronic childhood disease -- five times more common than asthma and seven times more common than hay fever. Dental care is an often overlooked but critical component of comprehensive health care for children. Pain and suffering due to untreated dental disease can lead to problems in speaking, eating, and learning. For children caught without dental coverage, dental problems can quickly become more than “just” a toothache. Research shows children who lack basic dental care miss more days of school and see their overall health suffer. In fact, children miss more than 51 million hours of school each year due to dental-related illnesses. According to the Children’s Dental Health Project, “The oral health of children has a significant and lasting impact on the productivity of our existing and future employees and leaders... Untreated tooth decay is progressive and can be devastating to children's long-term health, educational achievements, self image, and overall success.” And as Deamonte’s death showed, in extreme cases lack of dental care can even lead to fatal complications.

Health insurance coverage is a strong predictor of access to dental care. But despite its importance, dental coverage is largely excluded from many private insurance plans, and pediatric dentists can be difficult to find. For every child without health insurance, there are 2.6 children without dental coverage. Uninsured children are 2.5 times less likely than children with insurance (public or private) to receive dental care.

Since Deamonte’s death, Congress has recognized dental coverage as an important component of comprehensive care for children, enacting major policy changes to improve dental coverage for children. In 2009, the reauthorization of the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) required states to provide dental coverage to enrolled children, and gave states the option to provide dental benefits to certain children who do not qualify for full CHIP coverage. In 2010, the health reform bill known as the Affordable Care Act required that all insurance plans to be offered through new health insurance exchanges starting in 2014 include oral care for children, and prohibited these insurers from charging out of pocket expenses for preventive pediatric oral health services. These two new requirements alone will give millions of children financial access to dental health services, many for the first time.

Other provisions in the Affordable Care Act will help train more dental health providers. A new report by the Children’s Dental Campaign of the Pew Center on the States emphasizes the importance of availability of providers: the authors calculate that more than 31 million Americans are “unserved,” which means they live in areas where they can’t find a dentist in or near their community. In seven states, more than 20 percent of the population can’t find a dentist.

Maryland, Deamonte’s home state, has become a model for reform. One innovative solution helping to reach some underserved children like Deamonte is mobile dental clinics staffed by volunteer dentists, and in November the Deamonte Driver Dental Project Mobile Unit, a large van now equipped as a three-chair children’s dental clinic, made its first stop by spending the day at Deamonte’s old school.

These victories are all key steps in the right direction, and part of the solution still needed in order to make sure all children -- poor and wealthy, rural, suburban, and urban -- receive the dental health care they need to survive and thrive.

 

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

Four years ago this February, an entire community was devastated in Prince George’s County, Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C., when 12-year-old seventh grader Deamonte Driver died after co...
Four years ago this February, an entire community was devastated in Prince George’s County, Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C., when 12-year-old seventh grader Deamonte Driver died after co...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Sara Lira
Baby Girl due Sept. 16 :)
10:03 AM on 03/09/2011
I am lucky to live across the border. I can go to Mexico and get an extraction for 45dlls, if you over look the soda bottle with cloudy water used to feed the mouth rinser, the dried blood stains (tiny but there) on the small white table, the too young-looking dentist, oh and the lack of dental assistants.. $45dlls is a bargain, isn't it?

If I were to go to a Dentist here in Texas It'd be 45dlls for the fee, 30dlls for x-rays, 170dlls for extraction. So I have to go to Mexico and risk it.
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angryoldman
No1 told me when 2 run I missed the starting gun
09:35 PM on 03/08/2011
Wow! That is a despicable and tragic example of Mans' inhumanity to Man. How much lower can we go as a society in America before we say; ENOUGH IS ENOUGH !
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ProgressivesLoveAmerica
Former disciple of Mises, Hayek & Milton Friedman
12:20 PM on 03/08/2011
People are dying from lack of access to health care but, Iguess for some people, it's still not a right.

No free hand-outs. That's called "socialism." Something as simple as a toothache led to somebody dying! It's not even as complicated, decastating, or as expenisve as cancer.

Sometimes I find the condition that the U.S. finds itself truly shameful. We're the only industrialized nation without universal health care coverage.
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kkehoe5
There is no knowledge that is not power.
12:50 PM on 03/08/2011
Why would you need health care? All he needed was a visit to the dentist and $80 to pull it. No point in going to the hospital and charging the insurance $80,000 for a $80 dental procedure.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Katco
Misogyny: hard to spell, easy to practice
02:26 PM on 03/08/2011
DENTAL CARE IS HEALTH CARE! Since when is an extraction $80.00? You can't even get in the door for less than $125.00, let alone the charge for the extraction, x-rays and antibiotics. You are obviously gainfully employed and insured without a clear understanding of the true costs of Heath Care. Must be nice. Your understanding of the situation and compassion for your fellow man is overwhelming.
09:57 AM on 03/09/2011
These words are thrown out socialism, terrorism, with no meaning, no context, just incendiary fear meant to create knee jerk reaction. Our innate sense of compassion and justice is short circuited by this approach. Don't be sheepople be people! dare to love and care for your fellow man!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
timetocookdinner
Angry housewife
11:49 AM on 03/08/2011
My heart goes out to the mother/family of the boy who died from complications of his tooth infection, and single parents, and low-income families everywhere (myself included) recognize the agonizing chain of events that brought this sad ending.
Parents are forced to make impossible choices sometimes when children are ill. When my kids are sick I feel so ashamed and afraid to tell my supervisors that I need to take care of them. No more.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MeinNH
Ooooo Silly Me
08:22 AM on 03/08/2011
Sadly it is not just children who are suffering death due to dental issues. Many Americans no longer get dental care because they don't have insurance or the money. Shame on this country! Shame!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nicole Dixson
09:57 AM on 03/09/2011
Dentistry is the biggest racket in the universe. Completely overpriced. My aunt needed new dentures, $6,000 dollars. Are you kidding? My cousin took her to Mexico. Dentures, $800 dollars.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Herz
07:41 AM on 03/08/2011
Health insurance companies should be expropriated without compensation to their share holders. We are told that we lose about 125 persons nationally per day due to economic rationing of such health care as described above. All due to the wholesale purchase by these companies of our elected officials.
maxfax
Taa - dah!
10:35 PM on 03/07/2011
A child dies in 2010 in the US because he cannot access dental health care because of money?  This is preposterous.
04:51 PM on 03/07/2011
A simple problem that could have been resolved early and inexpensively was allowed to progress to a level of morbidity that cost a six-figure amount, and which still resulted in death.
07:37 PM on 03/06/2011
Will exchanges make it unnecessary for some employers to provide health coverage to employees? http://www.healthcaretownhall.com/?p=3678
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nys Cof
08:10 AM on 03/05/2011
Deamonte Driver lived in a fluoridated community but over a dozen dentists refused to treat him because he was poor. Unfortunately, organized dentistry is using Deamonte as an excuse to fluoridate even more areas while continuing to neglect poor children's rotten teeth. 80% of dentists refuse Medicaid patients. The Louisiana Dental Association created a law that disallows a dental van to visit schools. The ADA and constituent groups often lobby states to reject authorization of Dental Therapists, which are very effective dental professionals that might take some business away from greedy dentists - even though the DTs will treat poor people and most dentists won't and are more affordable. Arkansas fluoridationists hired PR agencies to convince AR lawmakers to make it a state requirement to add fluoride chemicals. Delta Dental will give $500,000 to every city in AR that must add fluoride. Of course, that will raise insurance premiums and might push more people into the non-insured category The solution is to require every dentist to take Medicaid patients. We know dentists love mandates because they are behind virtually every fluoridation mandate in this country. Modern science shows that ingesting fluoride delivers risks without benefits. Fluoridation gives the illusion that organized dentistry cares about poor people whom aren't welcomed in their dental chairs. Poor and undernourished are harmed the most by water fluoride chemicals. See http://www.FluorideAction.Net/health
maxfax
Taa - dah!
10:36 PM on 03/07/2011
The poor have no voice in America.
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independentlib22
12:00 AM on 03/08/2011
You're right maxfax. How do we get a voice? How so we organize. Does anyone have any idea? How do we become a group like Acorn? Acorn was killed over a lie, killed by Obama after then got him elected and he didn't need them anymore.

All we have is the Internet. I'm ready. I'm not a good leader but I'm one hell of a good follower.

Any ideas....ANYONE!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
don52
07:26 AM on 03/10/2011
When is the ADA going to stop promoting silver fillings. Better known as amalgam. Also mercury filling. Who in this day an age would put mercury in children's mouths. I was recently at a dentist and she told me that she can put mercury in my mouth but she cannot throw it in the garbage. Mercury is highly toxic. Until the ADA does away with amalgams they have no creditability. A practice that started in the 1800's when there were few alternatives and now in the 21st century they refuse to give it up.
12:50 PM on 03/10/2011
A lot of dentists don't use silver fillings anymore, especially on adults. Dentists still use silver fillings because they work well in certain mouths, soda drinkers, sweet tea drinkers (here in VA), people who consume massive amounts of sugar and have poor brushing habits. Also, if you have dental insurance you might be surprised to know that some insurances will only cover the price of silver fillings! Check your policies, because trust me, your Dentist has!