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Dental Insurance Benefits Expiring

December 1, 2011

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , — Dr. J. Peter St. Clair, DMD @ 11:54 am

I don’t know how you feel but I think this year is just flying by. I guess I feel like that every year. Only one more month left in 2011. For those of you with dental insurance, only one more month to use your dental benefits before they disappear and go toward the bonuses for the insurance executives. That is kind of a joke and it is kind of not.
As you know, if you have dental insurance, you have a yearly maximum amount of money that can be used for dental care. Although that yearly maximum (typically $1000-1500 per year) has not changed for 40 years in most situations, if you don’t use the money the insurance company keeps it. That’s right, if your insurance company doesn’t write a check out for your dental care, they keep whatever you don’t use.
On that note, if you have dental work that needs to be done, now is the time to do it. The only catch is that because many patients wait until the end of the year to use their dental insurance benefits, it is often difficult to get an appointment. Therefore, those reading this column will be one step ahead of everyone else. The big rush generally occurs in the next couple of weeks so book your appointments now.
This is especially true for patients who need multiple things done. Let me use a specific example. Let’s say your dentist has told you that you need a crown on a tooth but the tooth will need work done by a periodontist or even the dreaded root canal prior to doing the crown. Getting the “pre-crown” work done at the end of this year will allow you to finish the crown in the beginning of next year and maximize your insurance benefits.
It has always seemed crazy to me that we have to play these games with dental insurance, but that’s the way it works. If you have been told that you needed some work done and haven’t done it, call your dental office or insurance carrier to see how remaining benefits you have.
Just for clarification, as this is an area that patients sometimes get confused on, your yearly maximum is yours and not your spouse’s. If you and your spouse have dental insurance and a $1000 yearly benefit, you get to use $1000 and your spouse gets to use $1000. If you go over your maximum you cannot use any of your spouse’s benefits.
For those without dental insurance – you are not missing out on too much. Yes, dental insurance is nice to have, especially if your employer is paying most or all of the premiums. However, people tend to get into the frame of mind that if they do not have dental insurance they can’t go to the dentist.
I had a patient in just yesterday that had not been in for 5 years because he said he did not have insurance. Five years later the patient needs more work done than the insurance benefits will cover. It’s not worth it.
One thing is for certain, regardless of whether you have insurance or not, regular visits to a dentist is the key. If your goal is health you can’t do it alone. If the cost, or the fact you don’t have dental insurance is what is holding you back, talk with an office that offers financial arrangements that work for you. The longer you stay away the more difficult it is to catch-up.

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