The Daily Courier

Canadian Dental Associatio­n releases recommenda­tions for feds on dental care

- By MICKEY DJURIC

OTTAWA — The Canadian government’s approach to universal dental care should include preserving private dental insurance programs and using existing clinics should be part of the Canadian government’s approach to universal dental care, the Canadian Dental Associatio­n says.

On Tuesday the associatio­n released a policy paper following consultati­ons with federal Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos, provincial and territoria­l dental associatio­ns and dentists from across Canada.

They put forth several recommenda­tions for the Liberal government, urging them to have a national oral health strategy in place by April 2025.

Dentists across Canada could see up to nine million new patients as a result of the government’s new universal dentalcare program, the report says, but it cautions that new policies are needed.

“It’s a massive undertakin­g and we are pleased to see that this attention is being given to oral health care because we know there’s a sizable number of Canadians that don’t access regular dental care because of cost,” said Dr. Lynn Tomkins, the Canadian Dental Associatio­n president, in an interview with The Canadian Press.

The recommenda­tions include using existing dental offices, addressing staffing shortages so people don’t have to endure long wait-lists, ensuring that treatment costs are fully covered, and undertakin­g a survey on oral health.

The associatio­n also wants the government to explore incentiviz­ing employers so they continue to offer dental insurance to workers.

“We are concerned that whatever the government brings out, it does not disrupt the current ecosystem of third-party employer-sponsored health benefits,”

Tomkins said.

“We wouldn’t want to see you lose your dental plan.”

The associatio­n also recommends the federal government do a legislativ­e review of dental care every five years, and collaborat­e with provinces and territorie­s on its rollout.

Universal access to dental care is set to be fully implemente­d by 2025. Children under the age of 12 who are from lowerincom­e families are currently eligible to receive a children’s dental benefit through the Canada Revenue Agency.

This year, it’s expected the coverage will be expanded to teens, seniors and those living with a disability.

The Liberals said the benefit is intended to provide cost-of-living relief to low-income Canadians.

The current benefit is available to families whose household income is less than $90,000 a year and ranges from $260 to $650 per child depending on net income.

The NDP pushed for a universal dental-care program as part of an agreement to support the minority Liberals on major legislatio­n and confidence votes until 2025.

Conservati­ve House leader Andrew Scheer has said the current dental benefit is superficia­l, and that handing out cash could contribute to inflation and make the cost of living worse.

 ?? ?? Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos
Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos

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