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Florida picks up the pieces after Hurricane Milton; Georgia elected officials say Hurricane Helene was a climate change wake-up call; Hosiers are getting better civic education; the Senate could flip to the GOP in November; New Mexico postal vans go electric; and Nebraska voters debate school vouchers.

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Civil rights groups push for a voter registration deadline extension in Georgia, federal workers helping in hurricane recovery face misinformation and threats of violence, and Brown University rejects student divestment demands.

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Hurricane Helene has some rural North Carolina towns worried larger communities might get more attention, mixed feelings about ranked choice voting on the Oregon ballot next month, and New York farmers earn money feeding school kids.

'Untreated Crisis' as Concern Mounts Over Florida's Poor Oral Health

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Thursday, December 29, 2022   

Florida leads the nation in the number of individuals, nearly 6 million, who are living in Dental Health Professional Shortage Areas.

Sixty-six of Florida's 67 counties lack the amount of professionals needed to provide care, according to U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration data. Advocates say the shortage is of crisis proportions leading to significant impacts on general health as they say poor oral health is linked to impaired school learning, heart disease and even death.

Dr. Frank Catalanotto, founder of Floridians for Dental Access, said part of the problem is the significant cost of dental care. He noted in Florida and nationally, thousands of people with toothaches take their problems to an emergency room.

"The physicians in the emergency rooms aren't prepared to deal with this, so the patient gets antibiotics and pain medication and then told to see a dentist tomorrow," Catalanotto pointed out. "Well, if they couldn't afford a dentist today, they are not going to afford one tomorrow."

Catalanotto reported of the 150,000 who went to the emergency room in 2019, 4,000 of them were admitted to the hospital because the dental infections were life-threatening. As of 2020 and 2021, there were 12,264 dentists in Florida, according to the state Department of Health, and not all of them take Medicaid, which provides coverage for low-income individuals.

Most dentists in Florida are concentrated in large urban counties, with very few dentists in many rural counties. Three counties -- Dixie, Glades and Lafayette -- have no dentists. State health data show three other counties -- Union, Gilchrist and Franklin -- each had just one.

Catalanotto noted more research is connecting the dots on how this disparity is impacting the health of school children and adults.

"If you're not learning, you're not going to get an education," Catalanotto emphasized. "And for adults it's way more serious because there is now very good strong scientific literature about the relationship, for example, between gum disease, periodontal disease and diabetes."

At last count in Florida, Catalanotto said fewer than one in five dentists, just 18%, participated in Medicaid in 2016. He added the scary part of the crisis to him is how little the public knows about how oral health impacts their everyday health so, his group's focus is to spread awareness and eventually land on concrete solutions which get to the root of the problems.

Disclosure: Floridians for Dental Access contributes to our fund for reporting on Health Issues. If you would like to help support news in the public interest, click here.


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