The Economics of Everyday Things - 35. Dental Insurance
Episode Date: February 5, 2024Why is it separate from medical insurance? And is it really insurance at all? Zachary Crockett goes in for a cleaning. SOURCES:Brad Bolman, postdoctoral member of the School of Historical Studies at ...the Institute for Advanced Study.Pamela Maragliano-Muniz, prosthodontist and chief editor for Dental Economics.Wendell Potter, president of the Center for Health and Democracy; former executive at Cigna. RESOURCES:"Dental Medical Loss Ratios: Understanding the Landscape in Massachusetts and Beyond," by Shaza Stevenson, Megan D’Alessandro, Sandra Wilkniss, and Nicole Evans (National Academy for State Health Policy Blog, 2023)."Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2021," by Katherine Keisler-Starkey and Lisa N. Bunch (U.S. Census Bureau Reports, 2022)."Medicare and Dental Coverage: A Closer Look," by Meredith Freed, Nancy Ochieng, Nolan Sroczynski, Anthony Damico, and Krutika Amin (KFF, 2021)."Dentists’ Group Fights Plan to Cover Dental Benefits Under Medicare," by Julie Bykowicz (The Wall Street Journal, 2021)."Antisocial Dentistry," by Brad Bolman (Hypocrite Reader, 2021). EXTRAS:"'Insurance Is Sexy.' Discuss," by Freakonomics Radio (2023)."Does Health Insurance Make You Healthier?" by Freakonomics, M.D. (2022).
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Dr. Pamela Maragliano-Munes never thought she'd end up fixing teeth for a living.
I thought I'd become, I don't know, a professional hockey player or something like that.
Her dreams of glory on the ice didn't pan out, and her father suggested dental hygienist
school.
And I got right into dental hygiene school.
And who knew?
I absolutely fell in love with it.
I felt like I was finally going to school with a purpose for the first time. And I felt that if
I was going to place my hands on another human, there's such a responsibility that comes with that.
Maragliano Munez became a hygienist, but she didn't stop there. She completed her Doctor of Dental Medicine degree,
became a dentist, and in 2014, bought her own practice in Salem, Massachusetts.
She was excited to get to work helping her patients and building her business,
but she soon found herself spending much of her time navigating the complex rules of dental
insurance plans.
navigating the complex rules of dental insurance plans.
For example, some plans only allow two dental hygiene visits the year. And sometimes it's twice within the calendar year.
Doesn't matter really when it is, but then there's some that
say, no, no, no, we only allow two hygiene visits, but they
have to be six months and a day apart.
So you just have to kind of follow all of the rules of that plan.
In the course of sifting through the intricacies of these plans,
Maragliano Munes began to ask herself some fairly existential questions.
What is dental insurance anyway? Why isn't it part of medical insurance?
And what were her patients getting
when they signed up for it? Eventually, she came to a realization.
I think the number one problem is the fact we call it insurance.
For the Freakonomics Radio Network, this is the Economics of Everyday Things.
I'm Zachary Crockett.
Today, dental insurance.
If you have medical insurance, you expect it to cover at least some of the cost of treatment
when you have an illness or an injury.
Unless that illness or injury involves your teeth.
What puts those enamel-covered mouth nubs in a separate
category from the rest of your body? The answer goes back a couple of centuries.
Dentists were in the 1700s and the 1800s. They were often these carnivalesque
performers who would have little shows and moving performances
while giving dental care to people and partly the performances were designed to
muffle the screams of people having their teeth pulled.
That's Brad Bollman. He researches the history of medicine at the Institute for
Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. He says that in the 18th and 19th centuries, dentistry was sort of a
weird profession. A lot of the time these dentists were somewhat itinerant. They
would offer perhaps multiple services, so maybe teeth pulling and a haircut or
something like that. The performances might include juggling. The dentists were often these larger-than-life
impresario figures who would maybe pull your teeth
while making jokes or giving lectures.
In the early 19th century,
all of medicine started to professionalize and specialize.
And dentists wanted in.
But they had a bit of a PR problem.
For a lot of the medical profession,
dentists are still seen as a barbaric little side show
or something like that.
You know, it's not the most prestigious kind of medicine
that someone could practice.
And in a sense, that's at the root of this historic rebuff.
The historic rebuff that Bowman is referring to
took place in Baltimore around 1840.
You had these two dentists, Horace Hayden and Chapin Harris,
who come to the medical faculty at the University of Maryland,
and they say, we want to start teaching dentistry here.
They're refused.
And this moment really sets the foundation for these dual trajectories
between medicine and dentistry.
So you're telling me that we can trace the origins of the separation to basically two
guys who are rejected from medical school?
I think in a sense that is right. And that's at least the story that dentists like to tell.
Hayden and Harris responded to that snub by founding the first dental school in the world in Baltimore.
By 1900, the U.S. had 56 more of them.
Dental education was booming, and dentistry itself was changing too.
During the period when these institutions are growing, you get some of the first widespread
uses of anesthetics, which makes teeth pulling a slightly less painful endeavor.
You start to get debates among dentists about what is the goal of dentistry, what should
a dentist be doing, and then of course there's a natural development where tools get better.
You get some early mechanical drills
which allow for more effective response to dental maladies.
So there's this widespread growth in dental practice,
in dental technique, but because of the separation,
you really get this sense that being a dentist
is something different than being a doctor.
Dentists evolved from carnival style performers into trained professionals doing valuable medical
work. But that separation between dentistry and other forms of medicine persisted, partly because
dentists wanted to be in their own camp. Above all, they didn't want dental services to be included in medical insurance.
Both doctors and dentists fought against proposals to institute government-provided health insurance.
In the decades after World War II,
the doctors got on board with the system of employer-sponsored plans that cover most of us today.
But the dentists didn't.
Dental practice in the mid-1900s is typically very different from medical practices.
Dentists often work in their own small offices.
They often own their practices rather than being part of a hospital or being part of
a larger practice.
So there's very much an individualistic approach
and ideology to a lot of dentists.
The American Dental Association kept up the fight
against state subsidized coverage.
So in 1964, Medicare is proposed,
and the idea is that it would cover basic health care across the board.
That would include dentistry and dental visits.
The ADA fights a really vicious battle
against including dental benefits within Medicare.
It's a key fight for the dentists.
And ultimately they win.
Teeth are excluded from basic Medicare benefits.
While dentistry is mostly excluded
from public insurance programs,
there are now hundreds of companies
offering private dental insurance policies to Americans.
But are they really insurance policies?
Dental insurance is simply a gift card.
That's coming up.
People in general need to understand and get a realistic view on what dental insurance is.
Again, that's Dr. Pamela Maragliano-Munes.
I think the number one problem is the fact we call it insurance because when you hear
insurance, you think of, oh, I have homeowners insurance.
I have medical insurance.
I have life insurance.
So when something goes catastrophically bad, this insurance that you've paid for is there
to support you in that.
However, dental insurance does not operate that way.
And so I think that patients think that, well, I have dental insurance, that should be the
same as the way my medical insurance works, and it does not.
Medical insurance, like most things we refer to by the name insurance, works by pooling
risk.
In a given year, most of us will pay more for health insurance premiums than we get
back in medical services.
But a few people will need a lot of treatment, and their insurance will pay out much more
than their premiums cost.
We accept that deal, because even if we're healthy now, there's always the risk that
we'll get sick.
A dental insurance plan doesn't work like that.
Imagine you lost all of your teeth for some reason
or it's from a personal standpoint,
say your house burns down.
You contact your insurance company
and can you imagine if the insurance company is like,
we'll clean your windows and paint your siding
and you're like, no, no, no, wait, my whole house burned down.
I don't even have a house.
I don't even have windows anymore.
And they're like, well, we'll clean your windows and paint your siding.
You're like, but that's not what I need.
But that's what dental insurance is.
Dental insurance pays for routine treatment, cleaning, x-rays, the
stuff we should all be getting every year.
If you have a cavity or need a crown or dentures, your dental insurance plan will cover some
of that.
But most dental plans have a maximum benefit of around $1,500 a year.
That'll cover those cleanings, but it won't help if you have a dental catastrophe, an
infection that causes an abscess, a badly cracked tooth,
or any kind of mouth trauma. It's kind of the opposite approach as what insurance should be.
You're getting a $1,500 gift card per year that doesn't really cover that much of your dental.
In other words, when you sign up for dental insurance, you're paying for at most a small
discount on your dental work over the next year.
Dental practices will work very hard to maximize whatever benefit the patient has, but it's
important to understand that unless you are generally healthy and you just need dental hygiene visits, then you're really going to probably max out
relatively quickly.
If you are selling this kind of insurance, you can see how profitable it can be because
you're not providing very good coverage.
That's Wendell Potter.
He used to be an executive at the insurance giant, Cigna.
But after witnessing his share of horrors in the American healthcare system, he switched
sides and became an activist.
I'm president of the Center for Health and Democracy, which is a nonprofit organization
dedicated to healthcare reform.
As Potter explains it, the other difference between medical and dental insurance has to
do with what's called the medical loss ratio.
That's the share of revenue that the insurer has to spend on medical care for policyholders.
In a medical insurance plan, you have by law a requirement that medical insurers spend at
least 80% of what we pay in premiums that goes to medical care.
There's no such thing in dental care.
So it's kind of the wild west out there
for dental benefits.
That might be starting to change.
In Massachusetts, where Maragliano Munez practices dentistry,
voters approved a ballot measure in 2022,
requiring dental insurers to spend at least 83% on care.
Outside of Massachusetts, there are no requirements.
So dental insurance works pretty well for insurance companies,
and not that great for patients.
How does it work for dentists?
Well, it faces them with a choice.
They can sign up to become part of the insurer's network
or stay out of network.
Joining the network helps attract patients.
You can build a practice much faster when you participate in insurance plans.
If you participate, you're on a list and it makes it a little bit easier for patients
to find you.
It's almost low-hanging fruit for patients to find a dentist.
They say, oh, I subscribe to this insurance.
Let me find a dentist that's close to me.
But there's a trade-off.
If you're in an insurance network,
the insurer gets to set the prices you charge its members.
Every insurance has their own fee schedule
on what they feel your procedure is worth.
Let's say a crown.
They say, okay, our usual and customary fee for a crown
is say $1,000, and they will pay 50% of $1,000.
So say your crowns are $1,500. Just by being in network with this insurance plan,
you have to write off contractually $500 on every single crown that you perform. You may
accept three different fee schedules from three different insurance companies. It's
just what it means to be in network with them.
So could dental insurance ever look more
like medical insurance?
Could it even become a part of your health plan?
Historian Brad Bulman says, maybe.
People are starting to wonder again
why they don't have access to free dental care
or at least cheap dental care.
So my sense is that we're moving toward a world
where these things are going to be merged somehow. That's the
optimistic side of me. But then you also see this really
intense and long fight to keep dentistry and medicine separate.
So I think it won't be easy to transform some of these systems
because there are a number of people who are fighting to keep
this system in place.
In the meantime, dentists are trying to come up with better ways
for patients to pay for care.
Some practices offer in-house membership plans.
It's almost like Netflix.
You pay a monthly fee and it covers all of your preventive visits,
and then you have a percentage off
of any restorative visit that you have.
Wendell Potter sees value in that approach.
I am one of the people who pays an annual amount
to my dentist for my care,
and I find that to be more cost effective.
I do not have dental insurance myself. It's such a waste of money in my view.
For the economics of everyday things, I'm Zachary Crockett.
This episode was produced by Julie Canfer and Sarah Lilly, and mixed by Jeremy Johnston. We had help from Daniel Moritz Rapson.
There are a lot of great dentists.
I don't want to come out as an anti-dentist figure.
Right, and I don't think you're coming across that way at all.
Okay, good.
I loved my childhood dentist. He was a great guy.
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