Times Colonist

Federal dental plan sets double-standard for payments: hygienists

- LAURA OSMAN

OTTAWA — The Liberal government is guilty of a double standard when it comes to how much practition­ers will be reimbursed under a new federal plan, the Canadian Dental Hygienists Associatio­n is charging.

Last week, Health Canada released a guide for how much it will pay providers under the national dental-care plan, which is expected to provide oral health coverage for millions of low- and middle-income families.

Reimbursem­ent rates vary from province to province, but they show the federal government plans to pay significan­tly less for a cleaning that happens at a private hygiene clinic, as opposed to in a dentist’s office.

“Ideally, we do believe that a dental hygienist in business for herself should be paid the same as a dental hygienist that’s working in a dental office for the same procedures,” said Donna Wells, the associatio­n’s manager of profession­al practice.

“The same pay for the same procedures.”

As it stands, the difference is more than 20 per cent in some cases, she said.

The dispute is just the latest in a series of complaints from dental-care providers who warn low reimbursem­ent rates and high administra­tive burdens threaten the success of the program.

Health Canada did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment, and has so far repeatedly refused to specify how many providers have signed on to the program, except to say that it is in the “thousands.”

The program is a key pillar of the Liberals’ political pact with the NDP, and is expected to offer government-sponsored coverage to uninsured families with an annual income under $90,000 per year.

It’s expected to cost $13 billion over five years, and benefit nearly nine million Canadians.

The hygienists’ associatio­n raised the pay disparity issue weeks ago, and Wells said they were surprised to see the discrepanc­y persist in the guides released last week.

“The word discrimina­tion does cross our minds, it has entered our conversati­ons,” Wells said. The hygienist workforce is 97 per cent women, she said.

Suggested fees released by provincial dental and hygienist associatio­ns often advise that independen­t hygienists are paid less for the same services, but the federal plan widens the gap significan­tly, she said.

For instance, in Manitoba, the program will pay a dentist’s office $62.80 for a unit of cleaning, but an independen­t hygienist would be paid only $49.04.

Independen­t hygienists have all the same costs and overhead as a hygienists’ department in a dental office, Wells said. Those who offer mobile services have travel costs instead.

The lower reimbursem­ent means patients will either need to pay out of pocket or hygienists will need to absorb the cost.

“That’s not fair to the patient. It’s also not fair to the dental hygienist to be expected to cover that cost for his or her business,” she said.

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