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by AnthonyMouse 3389 days ago
The true problem you're identifying is poverty. Dental care isn't outrageously expensive. It doesn't have huge margins or vast inefficiency. The reason people can't afford it is because they're poor.

No bureaucratic solution involving government-subsidized dental services is going to produce a better outcome than taking the same money and giving it to those people in cash.

4 comments

The problem is that poor people need cash for lots of things. If you're poor enough that you can't go to the dentist, you're poor enough to be hurting in any number of ways. If we give you $500 and say, "now this is for the dentist -- save it in case you need it", they're quite rightly going to tell you to fuck off and go buy food and gas for the car to get to work. And then when they need a dentist six months later, we're right back where we started, except with the added shittiness of a bunch of upper middle class conservatives preaching about how they "wasted" the money.
> The problem is that poor people need cash for lots of things.

That isn't the problem, it's the reason why giving them cash is better. Because if they can't afford to put gas in their car to get to work, using that money will keep them from borrowing it from the credit card company. And then in six months they'll still have $500 less credit card debt plus having not paid 25% APR for six months.

I'm not arguing that they're wrong. I'm arguing that it isn't in any way a solution to the problem of paying for dental care.
How isn't it? They can get the dental care already, the problem is that doing so will put them in debt. Giving them money cancels the debt, which solves the original "problem".

The only way it doesn't pay for dental care is if they don't buy dental care at all because they need something else more. But if they're correct to do that because the other things really are more important, what kind of idiots are we to think we should be finding a way to redirect the money back to dental care?

The only real solution then is to get them enough money that they can pay for the dental care and the more important things.

There are actually already public dental clinics in many cases with reduced fees for people below certain income levels.
Yeah. Pretty much all the same arguments could be applied to automobile purchase and maintenance, something that many people require to get from where they live to where they work. It doesn't mean that we need to have a government program specifically to cover cars.
The margins are healthy enough that many dentists work 4 days a week while earning a fantastic living.
Salary isn't margin, it's cost. You have to pay the market rate to convince your dentist to be a dentist instead of a psychiatrist or lawyer or bank manager.

What are you proposing, price controls? Then what do you do when your dentist quits to become a real estate broker?

I'm not proposing anything. Just stating that dentists make good money on nice hours.

If I was proposing anything, it'd be to make it easier to become a dentist.

That would certainly make more sense than any kind of public dentistry service, though it's not clear there is a lot of room for improvement there. What makes becoming a dentist hard is, basically, medical school. It's possible there is some low hanging fruit there, but a lot of that hardness is intrinsic.
In the US dentistry is a separate track.

Many more people would like to become dentists than are accepted into dental schools.

http://www.adea.org/publications/Pages/2009-Applicants-and-E...

Of course having standards is good for patient outcomes. That said, I bet lots and lots (and lots and lots) of the rejected applicants would be fine dentists.

> Of course having standards is good for patient outcomes. That said, I bet lots and lots (and lots and lots) of the rejected applicants would be fine dentists.

Would you bet your root canal on it?

The fact that there are more people who would like to do something than there are people who are capable of meeting the performance qualifications for it isn't an inherent problem. Only 0.6% of Navy recruits end up becoming SEALs despite 50% of recruits expressing interest. I'm sure there are many, many Navy sailors who would be fine SEALs, but that's neither here nor there.

Unless you're referencing specific evidence that the qualifications are systematically too strict[0], then it doesn't mean much to say that there are rejected applicants who would be fine dentists. And to be blunt, I think it'd be easier to make the case that they're not strict enough.

[0] The working hours and revenue of dentistry practices are not evidence of this

Maybe the occupational licensing is too onerous? I'm sure that you can get cheaper dental treatment abroad.