The thought of trying to replace 8 teeth at $3,000 (at least) per tooth s nauseating!
Any input is appreciated!
Gloria
GloriaI am the parent of a special needs child and I am a prosthodontist, very sensitive to this issue of congenitally missing teeth. My wife has been preparing for one of her upcoming lectures when she pointed me to this group to see if I might be able to help answer a few questions. I have been treating patients with oligodontia and other congenital defects (children and adults) for 20 years with great success and we have learned a thing or two about medical billing. I have seen some of the costs discussed in this group for surgery and implants, both of which can be very expensive. But orthodontics, periodontics for gum tissue grafting and finally the restorations all can be equally expensive. No matter how skilled each doctor involved is they must know how to bill dental procedures under medical insurance, most don't have a clue. Many doctors feel they can write letters then stomp their feet and then get paid. NOT TRUE!!!!We live in Arkansas, near the home of Walmart. And because Walmart requires that ANY company that sales to them have an office in Northwest Arkansas we see medical insurances from nearly every state. We have had great success billing these procedures to medical insurance and getting paid, because three years ago we attended the right medical billing course. This really does give families hope. We now field questions from doctors weekly from across the country on medically billing for dental procedures, I would be happy to share that course info with any of your doctors (Dr Z at the ZGroup). My wife, Lori, is also lecturing in 3 different states this month to dentist who want to learn how they can bill medically. It can be frustrating for a dentist to bill medically if they haven't been trained to do so. The insurance company certainly will not hold your hand and give you the proper medical codes. I would not be surprised to see an entire treatment go beyond $150,000 over the course of several years of treatment depending on which procedures are done. And yes, I do feel most of this can successfully be paid by medical insurance.If you do not have medical insurance then maybe the dental school is a more economical option. There you may have to see a number of residents in training, but still a good option for those without insurance. I am unfamiliar right now with any government grants but you can look at the National Foundation for Ectodermal Dysplasias website for more help.http://nfed.org/index.php/about_ed/types_of_ectodermal_dysplasias
On Saturday, August 24, 2013 12:08:53 AM UTC-5, Gloria H wrote:
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Dr McNell,My name is Grace Lewis, my son Henry only has 5 permanent teeth. He is also missing some of his baby teeth. We took him to Childrens hospital to be tested for ectodermal dysplasia but the Doctor said he didn't have any other symptoms of ED and didn't recommend testing him.I live in Central Arkansas, my son is currently seeing Dr Hopkins an orthodontist in Searcy and Dr Wyatt our dentist, both have said nothing can be done until he is 17 and then he will need implants.Is there anything else you would suggest I do? I just don't want to get down the road and be told I should have done something different. I appreciate you posting to this group so much! You have given me hope because everyone I have seen so far has told me forget saving for college and start saving for his teeth. I am a nurse and have good medical insurance. So I pray that it will cover some of the cost.Thanks,
Grace
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Tricia
You are more than welcome. My wife and I are passionate about this. Lori is lecturing for Dr. Z, but all roads lead to Dr. Z as far as the ultimate training of medical billing to the doctors. I have cc'd Lori on this, she can email you contact info to give to your doctors about Dr. Z. I do know that she puts on training courses at Glidewell Dental Lab in California. I can't stress enough that this is you being your child's advocate, teach those doctors to help you. Do not deplete the college fund. Or you can call Lori at our office tomorrow 479-582-3360.
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Wonderful!! I will call tomorrow to make an appointment! I'm so glad you emailed. You are an answer to my prayers!!Thanks,
Grace
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Thank you Grace. I will be checking with BCBS. I believe there is wording in there regarding "congenital defects". We've met our deductible and then our policy pays at 100%...so great time to try to make it happen!I will let you know what I find out.GloriaSent from my U.S. Cellular® smartphone
Grace Lewis <graci...@gmail.com> wrote:
Gloria,
I haven't gotten that far yet. My son is 7 and he only has 5 permanent teeth. I think someone said in New York there was a law passed that oligodontia had to be covered by health insurance but I think in most states there is no law and it would just involve you presenting your case to your insurance company. Let me know what you find out!
Grace
On Aug 24, 2013, at 12:08 AM, Gloria H <glogar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Can anyone address the issue of insurance coverage? We have an 18 year old son who is missing eight permanent teeth. I have seen some scary numbers when looking at various "price per implant" numbers. We have limited dental insurance. Is Oliogodontia ever covered by major medical insurance? It seems this should be more than just a cosmetic/aesthetic issue. Any input is welcome. We have a great University dental program within 120 miles. Has anyone else gone this route? Can that be less expensive than a private practice?
>
> The thought of trying to replace 8 teeth at $3,000 (at least) per tooth s nauseating!
>
> Any input is appreciated!
>
> Gloria
>
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