
The Australian Dental Association has congratulated the Greens for addressing the seismic inadequacy in our dental health system.
But it says that Adam Bandt’s dental pitch which will cost $8 bn a year or $77bn over a decade to provide Medicare funded dental services, will be a challenge for any government to implement.
“While we applaud the Greens for addressing this enormous problem, what’s important and financially more palatable for either election-winning party, as a first step, is to address the oral health travesties within the aged care system,” ADA president Dr Mark Hutton said.
“Dentures left in for weeks, teeth not cleaned for days and sometimes weeks, broken teeth lacerating gums and tongues, extensive tooth decay, advanced gum disease fast-tracking the person to potentially fatal aspirational pneumonia, fillings falling out, pain, swelling and oral cancers in all stages.
“It’s a horrific roll call of neglect. What if this was your mum or dad? Wouldn’t you want something done? This is the nation’s mums, dads, granddads and grandmums all lying there suffering pain, neglect, disease, trauma—and the current government is ignoring the issue, hoping it will go away.”
With its ‘Stop The Rot’ campaign, the ADA is urging the major parties to urgently adopt as part of their election promises and post-election health strategies a range of measures which will go a long way to fixing the immediate problems.
1. To fund direct access to public and private dental services that maintain the basic dental and oral healthcare standards in aged care facilities
2. To deliver a training package to ensure that staff in aged care services are skilled to be able to care for residents’ daily oral health needs and to identify when dental services are required
3. To include an oral health assessment in the over 75 health check performed by GPs.
“These policy outcomes are crucial for the health and wellbeing of residents in aged care but are immaterial in budgetary terms,” Dr Hutton said.
“We hope the main parties realise what needs to be done and adopt our recommendations in their pre and post-election health strategies. After all, they will all be old one day too.”


