HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
2249 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2020 |
H.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO MEDICAID BENEFITS.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that oral disease is a significant health problem among many Hawaii residents, affecting their overall health and well-being. Since 2010, Hawaii has received a failing grade of "F" in three oral health report cards published by the Pew Center on the States due to multiple policy and systems issues in the State that have left the oral health of Hawaii's families and children in a state that is worse than the rest of the nation.
Access to regular oral health care varies greatly across the State, with rural and neighbor island residents and persons with low-income families experiencing greater access issues. Currently, approximately 180,000 adult medicaid beneficiaries are not getting the benefit of early oral disease detection and treatment for better overall health. Lack of access to dental coverage and oral health care is a health and social justice issue that disproportionately affects the poor, children, the elderly, and racial and ethnic minority groups.
In 2009, the State terminated all
preventative and restorative dental care services for adult medicaid recipients
and replaced it with emergency room services that are limited to pain relief,
injuries, trauma, and tooth removal and extraction. Nationally, studies have shown that reducing
or eliminating medicaid adult dental benefits has led to significant increases
in dental-related emergency room visits and associated costs. In 2012 alone, Hawaii medicaid paid $4,800,000
for 1,691 adults for emergency room visits for preventable oral health
problems, according to the department of health's Hawaii Oral Health: Key
Findings report.
The legislature further finds that in
Hawaii, a disproportionate number of adult medicaid beneficiaries ages twenty-one
and older utilize emergency dental services. While these adult medicaid
beneficiaries are twenty-five per cent of Hawaii's population, they represent fifty-six
per cent of all emergency dental services.
Just over three thousand emergency room visits for acute oral health
conditions occurred in 2016, totaling over $17,000,000 in direct costs, a cost
that has more than doubled since 2007. Data
also indicated that rural residents of the State, primarily from the north
shore of Oahu and the islands of Kauai and Hawaii, were more likely than urban
residents to go to the emergency room for dental problems.
The lack of preventative and restorative
dentistry services for adult medicaid beneficiaries increases potential health
care complications and costs for individuals living with diabetes, including an
increased incidence of gum disease, increased difficulty controlling diabetes,
and an increased likelihood of coronary artery disease. These complications can lead to increased
disability and death. For diabetic
medicaid beneficiaries, increased access to dental care could result in a cost
savings between $118,000 and $1,700,000 for diabetic medical care for all
beneficiaries, according to 2019 estimates by the Healthy Policy Institute of
the American Dental Association.
The legislature also finds that for
pregnant adult medicaid beneficiaries, ensuring good oral health during
pregnancy may reduce pregnancy complications such as pre-eclampsia, giving
birth too soon, or having low birth-weight babies. The average cost of services for the birth of
a healthy newborn is approximately $5,000.
In contrast, the cost of services for a premature or underweight newborn
can range from $200,000 to $2,000,000.
Poor oral health is clinically proven to have
serious adverse impact on overall health and well-being. It is linked to an array of acute and chronic
health conditions including heart disease, diabetes, stroke, depression, low
birth weight, and premature birth among others.
Tooth decay is almost completely preventable. However, preventive services, early
diagnosis, and interventions that can halt or slow the progression of most oral
diseases is currently unavailable to adult medicaid beneficiaries in the State.
Problems that could have been addressed
early, or even prevented, continue to progress, leading to poor health outcomes
and lower quality of life.
Dental care coverage is positively
associated with access to and utilization of oral health care. Research indicates that children and adults
with dental coverage are significantly more likely to seek and use regular dental
services than those who are uninsured.
Individuals enrolled in medicaid have an
increased likelihood of disparities in health care outcomes based on income. The prevalence of dental disease and tooth
loss is disproportionately high among low-income populations. Insufficient coverage or access to care often
further disadvantages medicaid recipients, driving poor health outcomes and
higher costs.
The legislature additionally finds that expanded
adult dental benefits can have tremendous positive impacts on state medicaid
populations. It has been shown that
individuals with dental benefits are forty-two per cent more likely to have a
dental checkup within the year than individuals who do not have coverage. Parents who receive dental care are also more
likely to take their children to the dentist as well.
Medicaid provides federal funds for health care
coverage to eligible individuals with low incomes, including children and their
parents, pregnant women, the elderly, and persons with disabilities. The federal government will match up to fifty
per cent of a state's investment in reinstating preventative and restorative
dental benefits for adult medicaid beneficiaries.
Although comprehensive dental coverage is
mandatory for children enrolled in medicaid, dental benefits for medicaid-eligible
adults are optional. Currently,
thirty-four states offer comprehensive or limited preventive and restorative
benefits to adults on medicaid.
The
legislature further finds that adding
expanded dental services benefits for the State's adult medicaid enrollees will
reduce the number of acute oral health-related emergency room visits and
improve these individuals' chronic disease risks and overall health
status. Current estimates on costs of
restoring expanded benefits to adult medicaid recipients in Hawaii that will
provide a range of preventive and restorative benefits for recipients to help
maintain and improve their oral health are being developed by the department of
human services MedQuest division.
It has been over a decade since the State
removed all but emergency medicaid adult dental benefits. The legislature finds that it is in the best
interest of the State and its residents to expand access to care by restoring
dental benefits to adult medicaid enrollees.
Accordingly, the purpose of this Act is to
appropriate funds to restore diagnostic, preventive, and restorative dental
benefits to adult medicaid enrollees.
SECTION 2.
There is appropriated out of the general revenues of the State of Hawaii
the sum of $7,000,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary for fiscal year
2020-2021 to restore diagnostic, preventive, and restorative dental benefits to
adult medicaid enrollees; provided that the department of human services shall
obtain the maximum federal matching funds available for this expenditure.
The sum
appropriated shall be expended by the department of human services for the
purposes of this Act.
SECTION 3. This Act shall take effect on December 31, 2059.
Report Title:
Adult Dental Benefits; Medicaid; Appropriation
Description:
Appropriates funds to restore diagnostic, preventive, and restorative dental benefits to adult Medicaid enrollees, provided DHS obtains maximum federal matching funds available. Takes effect on December 31, 2059. (HD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.