University of California: Study Shows Large Gaps in Access to Oral Health Care for Poorest Californians
A new policy brief from the
The study authors found that among those adults with the lowest incomes, 59% had seen a dentist within the last year, compared with 80% for higher-income residents. The disparity persisted even for those with private dental insurance, with 75% of the lowest-income adults and 85% of higher-income residents having had a dental visit in the past year.
The findings are based on an analysis of 2017 and 2018 data from the center's
The researchers found that among the lowest-income adults, 64% had public dental insurance through
The authors stress that dental care and dental insurance are not affordable to all Californians. The Affordable Care Act does not consider dental care an essential benefit, many employers do not include dental benefits in their employment-based health insurance plans and private dental policies are costly. Furthermore, many dentists don't participate in
"Our findings indicate that dental insurance improves access to dental care for all, just as the rising tide lifts all boats, but income disparities in access still remain," said
Among their recommendations, the authors suggest that policies be established to include dental care as an essential health benefit and to promote the availability of affordable dental insurance options.
Other key findings of the policy brief include:
* 41% of adults in the lowest-income group visited the dentist for specific problems, verus 23% in the higher-income group.
* 69% of higher-income adults have private health insurance, while only 16% of the lowest-income adults do.
* 28% of uninsured lowest-income adults saw a dentist in the past six months, compared with 57% of uninsured higher-income residents.
"The study aligns with others that show that individuals with low incomes have fewer checkups and less access to timely care than people in higher income groups," said
The authors note, however, that the economic effects of the coronavirus pandemic may make enacting these policies and achieving parity challenging.
"These disparities could broaden with the COVID-19 pandemic because of the rising rates of unemployment and loss of employment-based dental insurance," Pourat added. "The loss of tax revenues will also have a negative impact on coverage, particularly for the lowest-income adults who are
The study is accompanied by an infographic (PDF) that shows access to dental care among



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