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Patients traveling outside the U.S. for dental work

by KING 5 HealthLink

KING5.com

Posted on December 28, 2010 at 6:06 PM

The price of dental care can be pretty costly. Even if you have insurance you can be stuck paying thousands of dollars.

Some people are now going out the country to get their teeth fixed. It's called "dental tourism."

"I just thought I'll never be able to have it done," says Sheila Liner, who booked a trip through a dental tourism company. The found her a dentist in Costa Rica. Liner paid him $3,600 and made a vacation out of it.

"I was just so excited to be able to smile again, it had been a long time!" she says.

Shelia is part of a growing trend. More and more people are heading outside the country to places like Mexico, Turkey, Brazil, Thailand and Korea for dental work.

"Our fees here reflect a very robust system of safety," says Dr. Edmond Hewlett, a spokesperson for the American Dental Association.

Hewlett says patients in the U.S. pay more because dentists meet rigorous government standards, and some dentists in other countries do not.

"Let me make it very clear there are untold numbers of highly qualified dentists out there all over the world, you want to make sure if you're going to another country you have one of those," says Hewlett.

But the president of the dental tourism company Shelia used says it's dentists are thoroughly vetted.

"If their patients were returning to the U.S. or to their home country saying negative things about their experience to their friends and family it would significantly impact their business," says David Boucher, with Companion Global Healthcare.

Still, the A.D.A.  urges patients to carefully weigh their options.

"In these difficult economic times when everybody's looking to save money, and 'What can I cut out?' my own personal opinion, your body shouldn't be the first place to look to start making cuts," says Hewlett.

Shelia says her trip changed her life.

"It was well worth it. I'd do it all over again."

Companion Global Healthcare says it offers a dental tourism insurance policy for about $200 which would cover a patient for anything that goes wrong on their trip for up to $50,000.

Some U.S. insurance companies do pay for dental work performed out of the country.

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Comments: Displaying 1 - 15 of 15

dentalquality said on January 2, 2011 at 9:32 AM

Making the decision to travel outside the country requires independent research, a firm understanding of what your dental needs and anticipated expenses will be, and a commitment to your oral health. How we define dental quality (or medical quality for that matter) is elusive in this country unless you are a savvy consumer. The US dental system lacks transparency in quality and fees, does not ensure quality of ceramic labs and clinics do not undergo any type of quality certification. In fact, the ADA co-wrote the standards for the International Standards of Europe, and most Euro high quality offices / clinics adhere to these and are subject to routine audits that are very similar to the JCAHO hospital auditing standards in this country. Hungary has one of the most rigorous dental education programs in the world. Germany & Switzerland produce the equipment the US uses. For a list of questions to ask yourself if traveling for dental tourism, see kdana.com.

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toothcarpenter said on December 30, 2010 at 9:49 AM

I wish the journalist who wrote this would have done a little more homework. Try interviewing these people who've had the work done two to three years later. Failed root canals, crowns with decay under them, implants that perforate into the sinuses or outside the jaw bone... the list goes on. The standard of care for dentistry in this country is light years ahead of the rest of the world. You get what you pay for and you get to keep your teeth longer because of it. You can go outside the US, but plan on losing some of those teeth that were worked on. The people who need this type of dramatic dentistry didn't take very good care of their teeth in the first place, how is it going to work out when they have new restorations that catch food and are impossible to keep clean? The insurance companies haven't increased the annual maximum for over 25 years! Maybe the journalists should investigate that one? Same $1500 max benefit since 1980?

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hourforum said on December 30, 2010 at 9:17 AM

scott_bellevue I agree 100%! Good point. Now think, the state as of Jan 1st has cut all adult Dental coverage for low income, and disabled persons. Even with the low money some may get monthly to live on, a trip to Canada will once again cut the overall state tax income here at home. I would think to go to canada for things like dental work at this rate. I also believe that Dentist charge way too much for basic care. It is a shame, however because of their own arragant fees to do simple basic care for patients I understand why some are going overseas for this kind of work. Hell, I wish that Medicare and DSHS would cover dental in other countries. Ourscoruce the work just like every other business.

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gruswerks said on December 30, 2010 at 2:44 AM

Since it's close to impossible for a self-employed professional like myself to get any coverage, I chose an Asian country for the dental and dermatological work I needed. My UK-trained dentist and USA-trained dermatologist are first-rate. I got $15,000 of dental work for $1800, $4000 of dermatology for $160 in the government-run skin hospital (where my doctor is the chief of research); a dental cleaning was $80 and a skin consultation was $60 on my second, more recent, trip. Throw in the airfare, compare it to the $10K minimum per year which I'd pay for basic coverage - if I could get it - (without dental), and the arithmetic wins out. Of course I can't get truly sick, break a bone, have a bad accident or anything that happens in the real world, so I don't have the assurance of employer-based coverage. But until the so-far-unseen reforms are implemented (I'm not holding my breath) this is what I can do, and will stick with it.

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eightwrong said on December 29, 2010 at 9:08 PM

sorry, missed scott.

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eightwrong said on December 29, 2010 at 9:05 PM

All of you--and yes, I mean "all" of you obviously have good jobs or dental insurance, except maybe for brewster. Dental insurance pays maybe a thousand/two thousand a year, and a crown and a filling will eat that up in a day. Ad you still have co-pay. Free market is just another way to ID or kill the working poor. When it comes to co-pays or food, or co-pays for your spouse "or" yourself--which one do you choose? Dental co-pays are so low on the totem pole of necessities, most of the people I know are missing molars "because you can't see them from the front." And guess what? Lots of people on prednisone for chronic illnesses have what looks like methmouth. And lots of other people have pop-mouth where the acid in soda pop and sugary drinks stripped the enamel. When it comes to 10k to fix your teeth vs. 3k, it's no wonder people look elsewhere.

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dentalgirl57 said on December 29, 2010 at 8:16 PM

Hope they all know what is going in their mouth when they seek out of country dental care. I have found that most patients "don't know" what they don't know until something goes wrong. Is your crown made from a precious metal or is it manufactured in China? If it is, there is a very real possibility that it may contain lead or nickel...not so great in your mouth. Be informed. Ask a lot of questions. Just because something "looks good", that doesn't mean there aren't hidden hazards lurking below.....As missbeverlyann said...I work in a dental office and I have had many opportunities to help "fix" the poor quality of dental work done abroad. It is a shame.

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missbeverlyann said on December 29, 2010 at 1:07 PM

I work in a dental office and have seen many patients come in to 'fix' the poor quality of work done abroad. Such a shame...

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truthdector said on December 29, 2010 at 12:08 PM

Everyone knows Brits have horrible teeth, that's why their rotten teeth is a common pop-culture movie joke.

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underserf said on December 29, 2010 at 10:19 AM

As you probably already know, TD - that picture is MethMouth, comes from the notoriously poor hygiene of cranksters - nothing to do with socialized medicine. Besides NO dentists accept DSHS or most insurance these days - you want Free Market? Tell the ERs & trauma centers they can stop accepting anyone and everyone - THEN you can begin talking about Free Market medicine. Just be sure to carry your Amex everywhere you go cuz trauma centers will check your wallet before your vitals. Feeding trolls is a public service brought to you by Hypocrites Who Voted for Lying Teabaggers

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underserf said on December 29, 2010 at 10:14 AM

Socialized medicine doesn't explain the rotting teeth, infant mortality and teenage pregnancy of Mississippi, TD - you want laissez-faire economics? Move to Somalia. If socialized medicine is such a horrible thing, WHY do you demand our troops accept it? We should be writing our wounded soldiers a blank check, so they can get the care the wealthy whose fortunes they defended already have. Substandard care for troops, no taxes on the rich - hypocrisy at it's finest

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truthdector said on December 29, 2010 at 9:07 AM

See the picture of those rotten teeth up there? You could mistake that person for a Brit, the British have bad teeth, because the treatment is rationed and substandard.

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brewster said on December 29, 2010 at 7:29 AM

With the prices of dental work in this country we all will be tooth-less in a few years. A co-worker had some work done a couple of days ago, 20 minutes later he was handed a bill for $1500.

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truthdector said on December 29, 2010 at 7:17 AM

Free enterprise and competition will drive down the cost, that's why Oboama, Reid, and Nazi Pelosi object to interstate competiton to insurance, they want the systme to be a failure so they can take it over and micro-manage our rights as citizens of the USSA.

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scott_bellevue said on December 28, 2010 at 10:30 PM

Sign of the times. We mail order our pharmaceuticals from Canada, and my wife and I both had surgery overseas in the past two years. Our health insurance is in another country. If US corporations can outsource jobs, we can outsource our medical and dental care. But it's largely not the doctors to blame here in the US, it's the insurance companies and over regulation by the government that is driving up costs.

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