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"And you need to be very careful you don't give the impression that we're just trying to protect our turf if we try to do something about this," added Mitchell, who is in charge of undergraduate pediatric dentistry at UAB. Studstill, in an interview and statement, said the trustees debated how Sarrell clinics operated because dental students were working there outside the auspices of their school. The nonprofit has treated 130,000 patients since its founding in 2005 and has eight clinics statewide. A huge lack of access to dental care for the needy has fueled its growth, and the state's dental establishment is simply intimidated, said Parris. "I think it is that growth that scares them," she said. "They don't understand it." Mitchell worked at a Sarrell Dental clinic until recently, according to the suit, and he helped line up students to help treat kids. But Mitchell's tone changed, the suit claims, and he has gone down a road of "malicious conduct" by accusing the company of providing substandard care and of letting students treat patients without the supervision that is required by law. Parris said Sarrell has 23 staff dentists who help supervise students. Mitchell didn't return messages seeking comment.
The friction isn't confined to Alabama. Dentists complained when three private companies opened clinics to treat Medicaid patients in Massachusetts five or six years ago, said Mary E. Foley, who was in charge of the state's Medicaid dental program at the time. "I was getting calls from all over. It was, `Who are these people, and what are they doing?'" said Foley, now executive director of the Medicaid/SCHIP Dental Association, composed of state officials dealing with Medicaid dental care. Similar questions arose across New England and in Western states including Arizona and Colorado, she said. While as many as 70 percent of Alabama's dentists accept Medicaid, there still aren't enough to treat those most at risk for serious problems with their teeth: Children under 2 years of age living in poverty. "The dental associations are right in ensuring quality of care," said Booth, from the Children's Dental Health Project. "At the same time, I would hate to see a state where the dental association doesn't have a strong participation in Medicaid and also doesn't want others to see those kids."
[Associated
Press;
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