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A service for human rights researchers · Monday, July 8, 2024 · 725,989,509 Articles · 3+ Million Readers

Florida’s dental crisis deepens with over 7 million living in shortage areas

65 out of Florida's 67 counties have dental health professional shortage areas.

Florida is worst in the nation for the number of individuals living in dental health professional shorage areas. Sixty five out of the state's 67 counties have them.

Sixty five of Florida’s 67 counties are now designated in full or in part as a Dental Health Professional Shortage Area, affecting over 7.1 million Floridians.

Floridians are more desperate than ever to find dental care in their communities.. In just one year, the number of individuals living in dental shortage areas grew by more than a million.””
— Dr. Frank Catalonotto, president of Floridians for Dental Access

TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA, USA, March 11, 2024 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Florida is the worst state in the nation for dental access and the crisis is continuing to deepen, according to recently released data by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA). Sixty five of Florida’s 67 counties are now designated in full or in part as a Dental Health Professional Shortage Area, defined as exceeding a population-to-dentist ratio of 5,000 to 1. Over 7.1 million Floridians now live in these dental deserts. HRSA estimates Florida needs an additional 1,536 dentists just to remove current shortages.

Extremely low statewide and county dentist-to-population ratios

Florida’s statewide dentist-to-population ratio is also far below the national average. Nationally, there are 60.4 dentists per 100,000 population, while in Florida it is just 51.88. Besides Lafayette County, which has zero dentists, the 10 Florida counties with the worst dentist-to population ratios, some as low as 1/10th the nation average, are:

• Union County, FL (6.59)
• Hamilton County, FL (6.89)
• Glades County, FL (7.04)
• DeSoto County, FL (7.79)
• Gilchrist County, FL (10.59)
• Wakulla County, FL (11.66)
• Dixie County, FL (11.33)
• Gadsden County, FL (13.25)
• Jefferson County, FL (13.75)
• Taylor County, FL (13.89)

“Floridians are more desperate than ever to find dental care in their communities,” stated Dr. Frank Catalanotto, president of Floridians for Dental Access.“ In just one year, the number of individuals living in designated shortage areas has increased by more than a million.”

Skyrocketing hospital emergency room costs

Oral health is not a separate entity from overall health, but rather an integral part of it. Several diseases and conditions are intricately linked to poor oral health ranging from diabetes, high blood pressure, pre-term births and more. People who lack of access to affordable dental care often have no other choice than to live in pain, miss school or work, and rely on expensive hospital emergency room care.

In 2021, nearly 120,000 Floridians visited the hospital emergency room seeking relief from pain for a preventable dental condition. Hospitals billed more than a half-billion dollars for this care, with Florida taxpayers saddled with the majority of costs. Such preventable issues contribute to the statewide burden of oral diseases, which disproportionately affect individuals living in Black, Indigenous and People of Color (BIPOC) communities.

Significant movement for dental therapy legislation

Dental therapy legislation to increase dental access in Florida, HB 1173 and SB 1254 by Rep. Linda Chaney and Sen. Jay Collins, passed favorably through two House subcommittees during the 2024 Legislative Session. The proposed legislation would authorize the licensing of dental therapists to work in Florida under supervision of Florida dentists and was championed by Floridians for Dental Access, American Children’s Campaign, Florida Dental Hygienist’s Association and over 200 organizations and individuals.

Dental therapists are mid-level oral health providers, similar to a physician's assistant for medical care, who receive rigorous training in a select set of routine procedures such as filling cavities, placing temporary crowns, and extracting badly diseased or loose teeth. Dental therapists graduate from an American Dental Association Commission on Dental Accreditation (CODA) dental therapy education program and complete the exact same licensing exam as dentists for the procedures they perform. All published studies about dental therapy (nearly 1,500 in total) support dental therapy as an evidence-based solution to increase dental access and improve oral health equity.

Advocates believe Florida dental therapy legislation will be a key topic of discussion during next year’s Legislation Session, which begins Monday, April 14, 2025. For more information about Florida’s oral health crisis, visit floridiansfordentalaccess.org. HRSA’s Health Professional Shortage Area data is searchable by state, county and professional designation, and can be accessed by clicking here.

Karen Bonsignori
American Children's Campaign
kbonsignori@iamforkids.org
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