From ABC, September 23, 2006. 11:06am (AEST)
Survey fuels calls for national dental care scheme
The Health Services Union (HSU) is calling on the Federal Government to cover dental care for children and those over 65 under Medicare.
The HSU commissioned a survey of 1,200 Australians and found the majority believe people should be able to claim rebates on dental bills.
Public dental services are run by state governments, but HSU national secretary Craig Thomson says people are waiting up to five years for treatment.
Mr Thomson says five-year waiting lists on the public state-run system are unacceptable and it is time the Commonwealth created a national scheme.
"A lady on the [NSW] central coast told she has to wait over 12 months to get a denture made, which means she can't eat meat, she can't eat hard vegetables, she basically has to go on a puree diet for the next 12 months," he said.
"Now these are shocking examples in a country as rich as Australia.
"The only way to properly have a scheme in place is to extend Medicare so that you can take advantage of the private sector dentists that are out there and make sure that they're being properly utilised in the same way that doctors are under Medicare at the moment," he said.
New South Wales Health Minister John Hatzistergos has backed the call.
"All states and territories asked the Commonwealth to consider Medicare funding of dental care," he said.
"The Commonwealth however has not embraced that at this point in time.
"Indeed the only action that it took was to withdraw $300 million worth of funding from the Commonwealth dental program and use it to subsidise private health insurance."
I shake my head quite often, that Australia tries to feed hungry of the World, is everywhere to help everybody or at least uncle Sam, get new 100,000 + new heads a year to worry about.
And when it comes to internal matters we drive on sub-standard roads, have sub-standard medical care – Patel, we have no effective national subsidised dental care, obesity crisis is yet to get any attention.
Plus many more urgent matters, not to mention public housing or education and maybe higher education.