Disparities in Child Access to Emergency Care for Acute Oral Injury

Author:

Bisgaier Joanna1,Cutts Diana B.2,Edelstein Burton L.34,Rhodes Karin V.15

Affiliation:

1. School of Social Policy and Practice and

2. Department of Pediatrics, Hennepin County Medical Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota;

3. Social and Behavioral Sciences, Columbia University College of Dental Medicine, New York, New York; and

4. The Children's Dental Health Project, Washington, DC

5. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania;

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We examined the impact of insurance status on dental practices' willingness to schedule an appointment for a child with a symptomatic fractured permanent front tooth. PATIENTS AND METHODS: Between February and May 2010, 6 research assistants posed as mothers of a 10-year-old boy seeking an urgent dental appointment. Two calls 4 weeks apart, with the same clinical scenario, were made by the same caller to a stratified random sample of dental practices, one-half of which were enrolled in the state's combined Medicaid and Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) dental program. The only difference in the calls was the child's insurance coverage (Medicaid/CHIP versus private Blue Cross dental coverage). We estimated differences in the log-odds probability of scheduling an appointment for a child with public versus private insurance by using exact conditional (fixed-effects) logistic regression, which accounts for paired data. RESULTS: Of 170 paired calls to 85 dental practices (41 participating in the Medicaid program), only 36.5% of Medicaid beneficiaries obtained any appointment compared with 95.4% of Blue Cross–insured children with the same oral injury. Among dental providers enrolled in the Medicaid program, children with Medicaid were still 18.2 times more likely to be denied an appointment than privately insured counterparts (95% confidence interval: 3.1 to ∞; P < .001). CONCLUSIONS: Illinois dentists, including those participating in Medicaid, are less likely to see a child for an urgent dental complaint if the child has public versus private dental coverage. These results have implications for developing policies that improve access to oral health care.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

Reference48 articles.

1. National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research/Centers for Disease Control Oral Health Data Query System. Data query on trauma stratifying by age, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey III, 1988–1994. Available at: http://drc.hhs.gov/create_query.htm. Accessed December 18, 2010

2. Trends in oral health status: United States, 1988–1994 and 1999–2004;Dye;Vital Health Stat 11,2007

3. Problems with access to dental care for Medicaid-insured children: what caregivers think;Mofidi;Am J Public Health,2002

4. Parent or caregiver, staff, and dentist perspectives on access to dental care issues for head start children in Ohio;Siegal;Am J Public Health,2005

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