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						How U.S. seniors on Medicare can bridge the gap in 
						dental insurance
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		 [November 15, 2018] 
		 By Mark Miller 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - During a recent visit 
		to my dentist, we got talking about his frustrations with Medicare. 
		“It’s amazing - they have managed to eliminate teeth from the human 
		body.”
 
 Here is what he meant: traditional Medicare does not cover most dental 
		care. This comes as a surprise to many people at the point of 
		retirement. Studies have shown that more than half of workers aged 50-64 
		are unaware that Medicare does not cover preventive dental care or more 
		expensive and complex procedures.
 
 But dental care is a critical part of overall good preventive 
		healthcare. Research shows clear links between poor oral health and 
		chronic disease such as diabetes, as well as pain, chronic infection and 
		reduced quality of life.
 
 Many seniors simply pay for dental care out of pocket - the average 
		out-of-pocket expense among Medicare enrollees who needed dental care in 
		2016 was $607, according to the Agency for Healthcare Research and 
		Quality, a research arm of the U.S. Department of Health and Human 
		Services.
 
 But expense can run much higher if you need a crown, bridge or root 
		canal, for example.
 
 With Medicare fall enrollment season in full swing (https://reut.rs/2yj24dB), 
		this is a good time to consider your dental options.
 
		
		 
		
 Traditional Medicare will pay for dental care only in very limited 
		circumstances - it must be deemed necessary as part of a covered 
		procedure, for example a tooth extraction needed in preparation for 
		radiation treatment. But many Medicare Advantage plans - the 
		managed-care alternative to traditional Medicare offered by private 
		insurance companies - do include some dental coverage.
 
 Advantage plans usually include prescription-drug coverage, and cap 
		out-of-pocket expenses. But they often include some level of coverage 
		for vision and hearing care - and 63 percent of Advantage enrollees had 
		access to dental coverage in 2017 according to Avalere Health. Among the 
		Advantage beneficiaries with dental benefits, more than half were 
		covered for x-rays, oral exams and cleaning; a smaller number were 
		covered for restorative procedures.
 
 Many of the Advantage plans that cover dental work require no copayments 
		for preventive services, Avalere data shows, but cost-sharing rises 
		sharply for surgery, restorative services and periodontal procedures.
 
 And they usually cap annual benefit payments at $1,000 to $1,500, notes 
		Beth Truett, chief executive officer of Oral Health America, a nonprofit 
		group that advocates for better dental health. “The coverage in 
		Advantage plans typically mirrors many of the lower-reimbursed plans 
		that cover people while they are working,” she said.
 
 On average only 5 percent of patients hit these maximums in any given 
		year, according to Evelyn Ireland, executive director of the National 
		Association of Dental Plans. But if you do, the prices negotiated by 
		insurers with providers in your plan network can bring down 
		out-of-pocket expenses, she notes. “In the dental PPOs, the prices can 
		be as much as 30 to 40 percent below the actual fees,” she said. For 
		example, the plan-negotiated rate for a crown might bring the price down 
		from $1,200 to $800, she said.
 
		
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			Toothbrushes are seen during an organic market in Lisbon, Portugal, 
			November 5, 2016. REUTERS/Rafael Marchante/File Photo 
            
			 
COVERAGE OPTIONS
 For traditional Medicare enrollees, individual dental plans offer another way to 
get covered. For example, in Illinois a Delta Dental PPO offered through AARP 
for $72 per month will cover most preventive services; it has a $50 annual 
deductible and an annual cap on benefits of $1,500.
 
 And some providers of Medigap supplemental policies - for costs not covered by 
original Medicare - offer add-on options for dental and vision care, or discount 
programs to help customers save money on out-of-pocket costs.
 
 Low-income seniors lacking the resources to pay for care out of pocket or to buy 
commercial insurance face the most limited options. Medicaid is an important 
source of dental coverage for low-income elderly and disabled people who also 
are enrolled in Medicare (so-called dual-eligibles).
 
Federal law does not require states to cover adults through Medicaid, but most 
states have some level of adult dental benefit, Ireland said. And the expansion 
of Medicaid eligibility under the Affordable Care Act has more than doubled the 
number of adults covered by Medicaid, to 65 million in 2017, she notes.
 PUSHING FOR REFORM
 
 U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont has proposed adding a dental benefit to 
Medicare Part B as part of his "Medicare for All" legislative proposal. The 
American Dental Association has estimated that integrating a comprehensive 
dental benefit into Part B - applying the program’s existing cost-sharing rules 
- would cost the federal government $32.3 billion (2018 dollars); the base 
premium paid by enrollees would need to increase by $14.50 per month.
 
 Ireland doubts that a comprehensive dental benefit will be added anytime soon. 
Her group is part of a coalition lobbying Medicare to expand coverage of 
medically necessary dental care, which could be done through administrative 
authority. “We are talking about the idea of a comprehensive benefit, but for 
now we are focusing on things we think can be accomplished in the near term.”
 
 (The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.)
 
 (Reporting and writing by Mark Miller in Chicago; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
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