Reality check: the case of Deamonte Driver
- From: Robin T Cox <nomail@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 28 Sep 2007 12:54:20 GMT
From the Washington Post Feb 28 2007:
For Want of a Dentist
Pr. George's Boy Dies After Bacteria From Tooth Spread to Brain
By Mary Otto
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, February 28, 2007
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/02/27/AR2007022702116.html
http://tinyurl.com/2a73ku
Twelve-year-old Deamonte Driver died of a toothache Sunday.
A routine, $80 tooth extraction might have saved him.
If his mother had been insured.
If his family had not lost its Medicaid.
If Medicaid dentists weren't so hard to find.
If his mother hadn't been focused on getting a dentist for his brother,
who had six rotted teeth.
By the time Deamonte's own aching tooth got any attention, the bacteria
from the abscess had spread to his brain, doctors said. After two
operations and more than six weeks of hospital care, the Prince George's
County boy died.
Deamonte's death and the ultimate cost of his care, which could total more
than $250,000, underscore an often-overlooked concern in the debate over
universal health coverage: dental care.
Some poor children have no dental coverage at all. Others travel three
hours to find a dentist willing to take Medicaid patients and accept the
incumbent paperwork. And some, including Deamonte's brother, get in for a
tooth cleaning but have trouble securing an oral surgeon to fix deeper
problems.
In spite of efforts to change the system, fewer than one in three children
in Maryland's Medicaid program received any dental service at all in 2005,
the latest year for which figures are available from the federal Centers
for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The figures were worse elsewhere in the region. In the District, 29.3
percent got treatment, and in Virginia, 24.3 percent were treated,
although all three jurisdictions say they have done a better job reaching
children in recent years.
"I certainly hope the state agencies responsible for making sure these
children have dental care take note so that Deamonte didn't die in vain,"
said Laurie Norris, a lawyer for the Baltimore-based Public Justice Center
who tried to help the Driver family. "They know there is a problem, and
they have not devoted adequate resources to solving it."
Maryland officials emphasize that the delivery of basic care has improved
greatly since 1997, when the state instituted a managed care program, and
1998, when legislation that provided more money and set standards for
access to dental care for poor children was enacted.
About 900 of the state's 5,500 dentists accept Medicaid patients, said
Arthur Fridley, last year's president of the Maryland State Dental
Association. Referring patients to specialists can be particularly
difficult.
Fewer than 16 percent of Maryland's Medicaid children received restorative
services -- such as filling cavities -- in 2005, the most recent year for
which figures are available.
For families such as the Drivers, the systemic problems are often
compounded by personal obstacles: lack of transportation, bouts of
homelessness and erratic telephone and mail service.
The Driver children have never received routine dental attention, said
their mother, Alyce Driver. The bakery, construction and home health-care
jobs she has held have not provided insurance. The children's Medicaid
coverage had temporarily lapsed at the time Deamonte was hospitalized. And
even with Medicaid's promise of dental care, the problem, she said, was
finding it.
When Deamonte got sick, his mother had not realized that his tooth had
been bothering him. Instead, she was focusing on his younger brother,
10-year-old DaShawn, who "complains about his teeth all the time," she
said.
DaShawn saw a dentist a couple of years ago, but the dentist discontinued
the treatments, she said, after the boy squirmed too much in the chair.
Then the family went through a crisis and spent some time in an Adelphi
homeless shelter. From there, three of Driver's sons went to stay with
their grandparents in a two-bedroom mobile home in Clinton.
By September, several of DaShawn's teeth had become abscessed. Driver
began making calls about the boy's coverage but grew frustrated. She
turned to Norris, who was working with homeless families in Prince
George's.
Norris and her staff also ran into barriers: They said they made more than
two dozen calls before reaching an official at the Driver family's
Medicaid provider and a state supervising nurse who helped them find a
dentist.
On Oct. 5, DaShawn saw Arthur Fridley, who cleaned the boy's teeth, took
an X-ray and referred him to an oral surgeon. But the surgeon could not
see him until Nov. 21, and that would be only for a consultation. Driver
said she learned that DaShawn would need six teeth extracted and made an
appointment for the earliest date available: Jan. 16.
But she had to cancel after learning Jan. 8 that the children had lost
their Medicaid coverage a month earlier. She suspects that the paperwork
to confirm their eligibility was mailed to the shelter in Adelphi, where
they no longer live.
It was on Jan. 11 that Deamonte came home from school complaining of a
headache. At Southern Maryland Hospital Center, his mother said, he got
medicine for a headache, sinusitis and a dental abscess. But the next day,
he was much sicker.
Eventually, he was rushed to Children's Hospital, where he underwent
emergency brain surgery. He began to have seizures and had a second
operation. The problem tooth was extracted.
After more than two weeks of care at Children's Hospital, the Clinton
seventh-grader began undergoing six weeks of additional medical treatment
as well as physical and occupational therapy at another hospital. He
seemed to be mending slowly, doing math problems and enjoying visits with
his brothers and teachers from his school, the Foundation School in Largo.
On Saturday, their last day together, Deamonte refused to eat but
otherwise appeared happy, his mother said. They played cards and watched a
show on television, lying together in his hospital bed. But after she left
him that evening, he called her.
"Make sure you pray before you go to sleep," he told her.
The next morning at about 6, she got another call, this time from the
boy's grandmother. Deamonte was unresponsive. She rushed back to the
hospital.
"When I got there, my baby was gone," recounted his mother.
She said doctors are still not sure what happened to her son. His death
certificate listed two conditions associated with brain infections:
"meningoencephalitis" and "subdural empyema."
In spite of such modern innovations as the fluoridation of drinking water,
tooth decay is still the single most common childhood disease nationwide,
five times as common as asthma, experts say. Poor children are more than
twice as likely to have cavities as their more affluent peers, research
shows, but far less likely to get treatment.
Serious and costly medical consequences are "not uncommon," said Norman
Tinanoff, chief of pediatric dentistry at the University of Maryland
Dental School in Baltimore. For instance, Deamonte's bill for two weeks at
Children's alone was expected to be between $200,000 and $250,000.
The federal government requires states to provide oral health services to
children through Medicaid programs, but the shortage of dentists who will
treat indigent patients remains a major barrier to care, according to the
National Conference of State Legislatures.
Access is worst in rural areas, where some families travel hours for
dental care, Tinanoff said. In the Maryland General Assembly this year,
lawmakers are considering a bill that would set aside $2 million a year
for the next three years to expand public clinics where dental care
remains a rarity for the poor.
Providing such access, Tinanoff and others said, eventually pays for
itself, sparing children the pain and expense of a medical crisis.
Reimbursement rates for dentists remain low nationally, although Maryland,
Virginia and the District have increased their rates in recent years.
Dentists also cite administrative frustrations dealing with the Medicaid
bureaucracy and the difficulties of serving poor, often transient
patients, a study by the state legislatures conference found.
"Whatever we've got is broke," Fridley said. "It has nothing to do with
access to care for these children."
.
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