[Congressional Record Volume 161, Number 22 (Tuesday, February 10, 2015)]
[Senate]
[Pages S905-S906]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
NATIONAL CHILDREN'S DENTAL HEALTH MONTH
Mr. CARDIN. Mr. President, I rise today to recognize February as
National Children's Dental Health Month. Every year since 1981 we have
acknowledged the importance of children's dental health and worked to
ensure that all children have access to proper oral health. As former
U.S. Surgeon General C. Everett Koop reminded us, ``There is no health
without oral health.''
Today tooth decay is the single most common chronic childhood
disease--5 times more common than asthma, 4 times more common than
early childhood obesity, and 20 times more common than diabetes.
Despite the fact that tooth decay can be prevented, nearly half of all
5-year-olds have experienced tooth decay.
Left untreated, tooth decay can not only destroy a child's teeth and
health but also have a severe negative impact on a child's quality of
life. Because children with severe tooth decay are frequently in
constant pain, they are often unable to learn, play, or interact with
others. Recent studies have shown that children with poor oral health
are nearly three times more likely to miss school due to dental pain,
and children reporting recent toothaches are four times more likely to
have lower grade point averages than peers without dental pain.
Good oral health is essential for our children to thrive. It is
simply unacceptable that 16.5 million children are denied basic dental
care each year. The health and well-being of every child depends on
access to affordable care for all of his or her health needs, including
dental services.
Tooth decay and oral health problems also disproportionately affect
children from low-income families and minorities. According to the
National Institutes of Health, about 80 percent of dental disease in
children is concentrated in 25 percent of the population, and children
from poor families face an inordinately high barrier in receiving
dental care. To these children, the consequences of poor health care
can be devastating.
Many have heard me speak before, including on the floor of the
Senate, about the tragic loss of Deamonte Driver, a 12-year-old Prince
George's County resident who died in February of 2007. Deamonte's death
was particularly traumatic because it was entirely preventable. It is
outrageous that only a few years ago a young boy died in our country
because his family was unable to find a dentist to remove an infected
tooth. By the time he was evaluated at the Children's Hospital
emergency room, the infection had spread to Deamonte's brain. After
multiple surgeries and a lengthy hospital stay, he passed away.
This was a tragic loss of life that was completely preventable, and a
waste of terrible resources. A person's life, hundreds of thousands of
dollars, and all it took was $80 in dental care to save his life.
I recently heard another story that gives me both hope in the future
and strength and resolve to guarantee that all Americans have access to
proper dental care. Ronald shared his story at the 2-day Mission of
Mercy Health Equity Festival at the University of Maryland, where he
waited 15 hours at the charity clinic to have a tooth pulled that had
been troubling him for 2 years. Prior to the charity clinic, Ronald had
been living with two choices: endure increasingly worse pain or go into
debt to pay for dental care. A working man, Ronald had spent $800--his
entire life savings--to get a tooth fixed in 2012, but it continued to
bother him. He recently paid a dentist for relief. The dentist
suggested a more expensive procedure, but Ronald was unable to pay the
high cost. So it was just a bandaid, he said. Now he is behind with his
landlord and trying to catch up.
Ronald talked, however, with great pride about his 9-year-old soccer-
playing daughter, who waves away candy and drinks water instead of
soda. ``I didn't know about oral health when I was her age,'' he said.
Like many other children in Maryland, Ronald's daughter has access to
dental care through our State's Children's Health Insurance Program.
She has coverage for pediatric dental, she learns about oral health in
her school, and she is taking steps to make sure she has proper oral
health. She has coverage if she needs to see a dentist.
Thanks to CHIP, we now have the highest number in history of children
who are insured with medical and dental insurance. CHIP provides
affordable, comprehensive health coverage to more than 8 million
children from working families--people who earn too much to qualify for
Medicaid but cannot afford private insurance. CHIP also provides
funding for school-based health centers that are critical to providing
dental services to at-risk children. I have visited these schools and
have seen firsthand how effective they are in delivering dental care to
our children. However, if Congress does not act to reauthorize funding
for CHIP before September 30, the program's funding will run out and
millions of children will again be at risk.
I am very proud that my State of Maryland has been recognized as a
national leader in pediatric dental health. In the 2010 Pew Center
report on the state of children's dental health, Maryland earned an A
and was the only State to meet seven of the eight policy benchmarks for
addressing children's dental health needs.
In addition, in the Maryland Health Benefit Exchange, every plan
except one includes pediatric dental coverage as part of the
comprehensive medical plan, so families don't have to pay a separate
premium for pediatric dental coverage and they don't have an additional
out-of-pocket cost.
In the Affordable Care Act, we included pediatric dental as part of
the essential benefits; therefore, every family now has access to
affordable pediatric coverage. That is primarily offered to most of the
people in our State through a universal policy, meaning that they don't
have to pay a separate premium or copayment.
Dental diseases are chronic, progressive, and destructive over time.
Yet too often oral health care is overlooked or ignored. We have made
great progress, but there are still millions of children in our country
without dental care. We must continue to work to ensure that all
Americans have access to both medical and dental care, as no citizen of
our country should ever have to choose between going into debt and
receiving proper health care.
The health care system was not there for Ronald, but thanks to CHIP
and the Affordable Care Act, it has the potential to help his daughter
stay healthy for years to come.
Let's pledge to do more for our children, starting with a
reauthorization of
[[Page S906]]
the Children's Health Insurance Program--CHIP--including the guaranteed
pediatric dental benefits.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Ms. STABENOW. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
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