Chattanooga Times Free Press

Five Alabama counties lack dentists, director says

- BY ALANDER ROCHA Read more at AlabamaRef­lector.com.

Rural Alabama needs more dentists.

Dr. Zack Studstill, executive director of the Alabama Dental Associatio­n, told the legislativ­e Healthcare Workforce Task Force on Thursday that at least five counties in Alabama do not have a dentist serving the area.

“People have to drive anywhere from 45 minutes to an hour for a dental appointmen­t,” Studstill said, adding that transporta­tion is also an issue preventing rural Alabama from accessing dental care.

Studstill, a member of the task force, said retiring rural dentists can’t find dentists to take over their practices.

“The bottom line is we have to deal with what the situation is, and we need to find a way to get more dentists who have graduated into rural Alabama,” he said. “Because it’s a crisis there.”

Rural residents are less likely to get dental care, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Rural residents are also more likely to receive restorativ­e, oral surgery services or emergency dental services than those residing in urban areas due to untreated dental issues. The percentage of adults who have visited the dentist at least once in the past year was higher among those residing in urban areas (66.7%) than those in rural areas (57.6%).

Studstill said the shortage in rural dentistry can be attributed to a decline in dental school graduates since the 1980s, when the federal government began slashing funding to schools of dentistry because it overpredic­ted the need for health care workers. Dentistry schools began to close in the 1980s while others had to restructur­e financiall­y.

“They were replaced pretty well in metropolit­an areas, but again, in rural Alabama, they were not being replaced,” he said.

Rural areas in general struggle to attract health care providers. Rural physician shortages are projected to get worse in the next 10 years, according to a 2023 article published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine. The shortage of physicians could go up from about 20,000 in 2019 to anywhere between 37,800 and 124,000 by 2034.

One initiative provides a loan for up to the annual cost of in-state tuition and required fees at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Dentistry. In return, the newly graduated dentists must agree to work fulltime in a clinical practice as a licensed dentist in an area of critical need for five years and participat­e in the state Medicaid program.

According to a 2021 report from the Alabama Commission on the Evaluation of Services, the Board of Medical Scholarshi­p Awards, which provides scholarshi­ps to medical students, has had a 93% success rate, whereas the Board of Dental Scholarshi­p Awards had a success rate of 10%.

Loans for dental school were only partially forgiven in its initial program, whereas the loans for medical schools were fully forgiven after a certain amount of years depending on the size of the community in which the student served.

Dental school loans were awarded to 90 individual­s in the old loan program, and only nine dentists have fulfilled the loan requiremen­t since 2010 — none in the 22 counties with a defined need. The majority opted to pay back the forgivable amount.

The Board of Dental loans are now fully forgiven after four to five years of serving a rural community, depending on community characteri­stics.

Studstill said that with more funding in the past five years, the program already has three dentists practicing in areas with high need. There are 12 who are under contract working toward graduation, with five waiting for the contract to be finalized.

“This is beginning to really move. It’s taken a long time, and we had to get funding first. And then we had to work with the school of dentistry to get the program really off the ground running. … It’s going to take time,” he said.

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