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Alberta Dentist Association ready to develop Made-in-Alberta Dental Care Plan with the province

The Alberta Dental Association outlined that they are ready to work with the provincial government to create a new Made-in-Alberta Dental Care Plan.
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The Alberta Dental Association outlines that they are ready to come to the table with the province to develop a Made-in-Alberta Dental Care Program.

The Alberta Dental Association (ADA) shares that they are prepared to come to the table with the province, to help bring a Made-in-Alberta Dental Care Program.

With applications for the Canadian Dental Care Plan opening up for all eligible Canadians, President of the ADA, Dr. Hans Herchen, believes that this creates a complicated system for Alberta’s dental offices and their patients.

“Dental offices now have a lot of administrative explaining to do to patients, [like] what plan they should use or how they can use a plan,” Herchen explained. “There’s a lot of opportunity here for improving the provincial dental plans that have not been modernized in many years.”

In terms of the current plan, Herchen believes that there’s several problems that need to be addressed.

“First, patients don’t even know which plan they’re eligible for and how to access that eligibility,” he said. “Then, there’s the significant workload at the dental office explaining these plans to the patients, and there’s a lack of clarity as to what services are covered and what are not covered.”

He adds that a lot of their submissions through the federal plan go responded. Because of this, dentists send “pre-authorizations” to help establish coverage.

“It’s complicated to explain to a patient what the coverage is if we don’t even get a response,” he said. “On top of that, Alberta has many beautiful private dental plans or dental plans managed through an employer. […] There’s a significant risk that this federal plan can damage or eliminate these beautiful plans that Canadians have gotten used to.”

As severe plan limitations continue to underserve patients under provincial dental plans, Herchen said the ADA is ready to develop a plan with the province that can better serve residents in Alberta.

“We also would like to eliminate the red tape and the administrative burden with these provincial plans.” he said. “We would also like to take this opportunity to draw attention to the fact that there is a severe shortage of staff in rural Alberta.

“Hygienists and assistants are very difficult to find, even in the major centres of Edmonton and Calgary. We would like to work with the provincial government to resolve that issue.”

Following an announcement by the province last year to opt out of the federal dental plan by 2026, Herchen said the ADA is asking the Alberta Government to create a dental care plan that better serves all Albertans.

“It’s a beautiful opportunity that we have in front of us,” Herchen said. “But the government must come to the table and act on their commitment to opt out.”

On another note, Herchen and the ADA would like to encourage to take care of their dental health as April is Oral Health Month.

“I encourage everyone to take great care of their teeth,” he said. “One of the easiest ways to do that is with high commitment to brushing and flossing, and just high commitment to home care. You can have excellent teeth on a very good budget with excellent home care. It’s a great way of taking care of your teeth and your pocket book.

“It’s been shown that people who have good dental care and good teeth are healthier overall.”




Comments 13

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AirdrieBorn&Raised81
AirdrieBorn&Raised81
Airdrie City View

🙄

B
Bigolpiggybank
Rocky Mountain Outlook

I’m sure this won’t end up being a plan where you have to take out a second mortgage to save a tooth. Oh wait, that’s the dental plan we already have. Silly me.

Sanity Rules
Sanity Rules
Airdrie City View

This has got to be one of the worst written articles I’ve read in a long time. There’s no clear reason or logic to why they’re tossing a working and expanding federal program and asking the province to create a whole new one??

SW
Steve Wall

I suspect this quote explains their motivation..“On top of that, Alberta has many beautiful private dental plans or dental plans managed through an employer. […] There’s a significant risk that this federal plan can damage or eliminate these beautiful plans that Canadians have gotten used to.” Beautiful private dental plans??? Sounds like Trump and his "beautiful tariffs."

T
Tony-O
St. Albert Gazette

"They" are not tossing anything, Premier Smith has told the Federal Government that Alberta will be withdrawing from the federal program in 2026. The funds may arguably then be sent to the province directly by the Feds and will the money be used by the province to upgrade their existing provincial low income dental plans or just go into general revenues?

RI
R. Samantha Istance

I have no idea what that article was about. Was it a thinly veiled attempt to throw shade at the federal dental plan and keep private insurance plans relevant? What nonsense, of course you can keep your private dental coverage while a federal plan is in place. Good grief! Sounds like the Republican's nonsense they tried to use as an argument against universal healthcare in the US.

T
Tony-O
St. Albert Gazette

There is data showing that some employers have already dropped their dental benefits for employees, and this was before the CDCP expanded to the 18-64 yr old cohort. If you review what coverage the federal plan offers it is not nearly as comprehensive coverage as what most employer-sponsored dental benefit plans offer. So, why trade in a good benefit for a lower benefit?

TN
Tired Of Noise

Alberta dentists most expensive in Canada
Calgary Herald

T
Tony-O
St. Albert Gazette

This is not true. How old was this headline? Any Alberta dentist who follows the provincial fee guide, does not have the highest fees in Canada.

S
sb999
LakelandToday.ca

I didn't have any problem understanding when I had a work dental plan and when I have a government plan. But that wont' stop the UCP from once again adding confusion and duplication and cost to anything they touch. If the problem is staffing then get on the staffing problem. Don't use the Trump tactic of breaking things as a distraction for incompetence. Everyone can see through that these days.

CM
Charlie McLean
Rocky Mountain Outlook

The Alberta seniors plan is very limited basic treatment plan. You get 5000.00 to last 5 years. If you use it up in 3 years you are on the hook for the next 2 .
You can get additional coverage at a cost. Alberta Blue Cross offers A, B , or C for seniors,
My dental office has no problem with the Federal Plan
I believe if a dental office is having problems they have not taken the time to understand it

AirdrieBorn&Raised81
AirdrieBorn&Raised81
Airdrie City View

Bang on Charlie. Businesses blaming the government for the government program. Each business wants it done their way. Self entitlement at its finest.

AirdrieBorn&Raised81
AirdrieBorn&Raised81
Airdrie City View

UCP is just plain and simply a joke. Anything health related should be taken away from the province of Alberta and a fed should step in and run. TBH e fiasco with AHS is enough to show how deep the corruption with the UCP runs with health care. The announcement of public money for a privelate health care institution in Airdrie now?? Get real. This stinks of American type policies and has the musk of that rat identifying as a Canadian Smith.

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