More Dental Care Through Medicare, Australia
Main Category: DentistryAlso Included In: Medicare / Medicaid / SCHIP
Article Date: 16 Aug 2007 - 2:00 PST
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3.86 (22 votes) |
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3.5 (2 votes) |
| Article Opinions: | 1 posts |
New arrangements will provide eligible patients with up to $4,250 worth of Medicare-funded dental treatment over two consecutive calendar years.
In the 2007 Budget, the Government provided an expansion of the existing Medicare dental items for people with chronic and complex conditions. The Budget announcement included an annual diagnostic consultation and a maximum of $2,000 in benefits for dental treatment each calendar year.
The new provisions announced today will give more flexibility for patients to receive dental treatment when they require services. It means that many patients who require complex treatment such as restorative dental work or dentures will now receive Medicare services as part of a single course of treatment rather than having to split or defer treatment across different calendar years.
These Medicare items target people with chronic and complex conditions (such as diabetes, heart disease or cancer) where the person's oral health is having, or is likely to have, an impact on his or her general health. To be eligible, a person needs to be under a GP Management Plan and Team Care Arrangements. Residents of aged care facilities can also have access to the dental items if they are managed by a GP under a multidisciplinary care plan. All patients will need to be referred to a dentist by a GP.
The new Medicare dental items will commence on 1 November 2007, subject to the passage of legislation, at an estimated cost of $384.6 million over four years, up from an estimated $377.6 million on Budget night.
http://www.health.gov.au
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MLA
11 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/79773.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/79773.php.
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Visitor Opinions In Chronological Order (1)
Disgusted
posted by william brady on 7 Jan 2008 at 7:16 pmI think it is rather disgusting to think that before you can have access to dental health care by a private practising dentist you have to have diabetes or cancer and have to be referred by a gp. I am 78 yrs of age and my only income is the government pension, I have had cancer and part of a lung removed, I have very bad teeth and receding gums and suffer periodic pains in my mouth, and sometimes cannot sleep because of the pain, I have been to my doctor but I have been told I do not come under this category. I really do not need a health plan I need my teeth removed but I cannot afford the cost of a dentist, the public hospital is in shepparton and I live in cobram, vic. apart from that there is a long waiting list of patients I will have to wait at least 12 to 24 months to have attention, there is a dental clinic in cobram which I believe belongs to the cobram hospital but that is being used for a private dental practice which all in all I think is bloody disgusting.
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