State News
Gov. Beshear seeks better dental health
FRANKFORT — Dr. Mike Porter, the executive director of the Kentucky Dental Association, said, “It’s a start.”
Al Smith, former newspaper publisher, host of Comment on Kentucky and chairman of the Appalachian Research Commission under President Jimmy Carter, called it “a promise kept.”
It is a nearly $2 million state initiative, paid for by grants from the ARC and the Health Resources and Services Administration to improve the dental health of Kentucky’s children, especially those in distressed counties of Appalachia.
Gov. Steve Beshear announced the program Tuesday and he will make stops in Russell, Morehead, Staffordsville and Hazard on Wednesday. The goal: to increase the number of dental visits for children up to six years old by 16 percent and to reduce the decay rate in children in the 40 distressed counties of Kentucky’s Appalachian region by 15 percent.
A 2001 University of Kentucky study found that 46 percent of Kentucky’s children between the ages of 2 and 4 already suffered some dental decay. In 2004, Kentucky led the nation in persons 65 and older who were missing teeth and 27 percent of Kentucky residents of all ages had lost six or more teeth to decay or gum disease compared to 18 percent nationally.
Porter said the state has about 2,300 dentists but, according to the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, only about 450 of them are Medicaid providers who treat children. Of those, said Porter and the Cabinet, only about 50 are pediatric dentists. Only 28 of Kentucky’s 120 counties have practicing pediatric dentists.
“Dental health is a key component of overall health and well-being, and we want Kentucky’s children to have the healthy start in life they deserve,” Beshear said.
Smith applauded Beshear’s initiative. Smith has made better dental care for children in Kentucky an issue and he said Beshear’s announcement kept a promise he made in the 2007 gubernatorial election.
Smith said he spotted candidate Beshear at Lexington restaurant for a fundraising event and elicited his promise to deal with the problem if elected.
“We talk a lot about promises that are not kept,” Smith said to Beshear at the close of the press conference. “But you made promises to me twice that you’d do something about this issue, before you were elected and right after you were elected, and now we’re here. In bad times, this is good news.”
The program will be funded by an $877,332 grant from HRSA and two ARC grants, one for $593,978 and the other for $148,122. It will pay stipends for dentists to receive training in pediatric care, training which will count toward a year’s credit for required continuing education. The state will provide a match of nearly $466,000, virtually all of that in the form of in-kind administrative services. Beshear said less than $20,000 in actual cash would be spent by the state.
Beshear said another goal is to establish up to 12 coalitions across counties and communities to facilitate better dental health, tailored to individual community needs and characteristics. And by year three of the program, he said, the state hopes to provide at least two sets of portable dental equipment which can be utilized in non-clinical settings such as schools or day care centers.
Porter, the head of the dental association, said he’d like to see a requirement that all children undergo a full dental screening before entering school — just like the medical exams and proof of inoculation they now are required to have.
“We, as dental professionals, see it as a first step,” Porter said of the initiative announced Tuesday. “It took us 10 years to get this — but it’s a start.”
Beshear will continue to promote the program with stops Wednesday at Russell Elementary in Greenup County at 9 a.m.; at McBrayer Elementary in Morehead at 11 a.m.; at Highland Elementary in Staffordsville at 1:30 p.m. and at Dennis Wooten Elementary in Hazard at 4 p.m.
Ronnie Ellis writes for CNHI News Service and is based in Frankfort. Reach him at rellis@cnhi.com. The Richmond Register is a CNHI newspaper.
- State News
-
-
House passes $17.5B budget
The outcome was never in doubt and after three hours and 24 speeches the House passed its version of a $17.5 billion, project-filled, debt-laden two-year budget 65-33.
There are schools, water and sewer projects and roads for those who voted with Democratic leadership on the plan but there’s less money for education at all levels, cuts to corrections which may hit county jails hardest and few capital projects in Republican districts. One Republican, Rep. Jim Stewart of Flat Lick voted for the measure while one Democrat, Jim Wayne of Louisville voted against it. Stewart voted last week for a $371 million revenue package and he received the only major project in a Republican district. -
Ky. Senate panel OKs bill to spur organ donations
A Kentucky advocate for organ donations predicted that a bill advanced by a Senate panel Wednesday will spur more donations leading to lifesaving transplants.
The bill updates procedures for Kentuckians to make, alter or revoke wishes to make anatomical gifts. They could also expressly state they don’t wish to be donors. -
Proposed budget clears House panel
A Kentucky House committee approved a proposed $17.5 billion two-year state budget Tuesday night that includes cuts to higher education and seeks to trim the prison population by increasing use of parole for some nonviolent criminals to squeeze savings.
The spending blueprint proposes about $1.3 billion in general fund bonding for construction projects aimed at creating thousands of jobs at a time of stubbornly high unemployment. -
Bill opponents to miss out on school projects
Kentucky House members who opposed a revenue measure linked to balancing the next state budget will be empty-handed when school construction projects are doled out as part of the spending plan, Speaker Greg Stumbo said Monday.
-
Bill would require treatment for addicted pregnant women
There they sat, the ACLU, Right to Life and criminal defense attorneys side by side, taking the same position on legislation, strange bedfellows all opposed to a measure to test pregnant women for substance abuse.
House Bill 430, sponsored by Rep. Richard Henderson, D-Jeffersonville, would create the offense of alcohol or controlled substance endangerment of a child prior to birth and permit a court to sentence the pregnant mother to treatment for up to six months. -
Activists, some lawmakers try again to cap payday lender interest
Tammy Taylor was short of cash, so she resorted to a payday lender to get by. She thought it was a short-term fix, but she says it ended up costing her $42,000 over seven years and led her to file for bankruptcy. She typically took out multiple loans at one time holding as many as five, which cost her about $500 a month in interest.
-
House Democrats, Beshear look for ‘common ground’ on budget
House Democratic leaders met with Gov. Steve Beshear for about 45 minutes Monday afternoon to see if they can work together on a plan to balance a state budget facing more than a $1.4 billion shortfall for the next two years.
-
Beshear budget gets cool reception
Gov. Steve Beshear stunned many lawmakers Tuesday night by proposing to balance the next two-year budget with $780 million of revenue from video lottery terminals at race tracks – a proposal that has failed in the past and prospects for which look bleak now.
-
Revenue forecasts still call for major shortfall next two years
Even when it is good news on the fiscal front in Frankfort, it still is bad news.
-
Beshear says position on constitutional amendment consistent
When he ran for governor in 2007, Steve Beshear said he wanted the voters of Kentucky to have the chance to vote for or against expanded gambling. But now, Gov. Steve Beshear says a constitutional amendment is not necessary to pass legislation authorizing video lottery terminals at existing horse tracks.
- More State News Headlines
-
House passes $17.5B budget


