Medicaid Dental Expansions Face Rollback Risk From $900B Federal Cuts
The article reports that the GOP’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed by President Donald Trump last year, is expected to reduce federal Medicaid spending by more than $900 billion over the next decade, putting recently expanded adult dental benefits at risk in dozens of states. States including Tennessee, which began covering adult dental in 2023 and spent about $64 million on it in 2024 while cutting dental‑related ER visits by 20%, now face steep funding losses — roughly $7 billion over ten years in Tennessee’s case and up to $150 billion in California — that could force rollbacks of optional services like dental care. Since 2021, 18 states have moved to cover preventive and restorative dental services for adults on Medicaid, and 38 states plus D.C. now offer enhanced adult dental benefits, yet new data show that in sampled expansion states only 13%–22% of adult enrollees see a dentist at least once a year. Nationwide, only about 41% of dentists participate in Medicaid and many cap the number of Medicaid patients they take, contributing to ongoing access problems like those faced by low‑income Tennesseans who still cannot find a local provider despite new coverage. Dental policy researchers and advocates warn that the looming federal cuts could wipe out fragile gains in adult oral‑health access and push more poor patients back into emergency rooms for preventable dental crises, even as social‑media debates focus on whether Medicaid should cover adult dental care at all.
📌 Key Facts
- The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is projected to cut federal Medicaid spending by more than $900 billion over 10 years, with expected losses ranging from about $184 million for Wyoming to about $150 billion for California.
- Tennessee’s Medicaid program began covering adult dental care in 2023, spent nearly $64 million on it in 2024, and reports a 20% drop in dental‑related ER visits, yet is projected to lose about $7 billion in Medicaid funding over the next decade under the new law.
- As of last year, 38 states and D.C. offer enhanced adult dental benefits; in a sample of six expansion states, only 13%–22% of adult Medicaid enrollees saw a dentist at least once in the most recent year, compared with about 50%–60% of adults with private dental coverage.
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