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Want to hear from industry experts who are working to increase access, equity, and integration in the oral health industry? Curious about the new innovations and emerging best practices that are shaping the future of care? Explore our blog to find the stories, perspectives, and ideas that paint a picture of progress and change in oral health. 

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For far too many people in this country, oral health care is too expensive and out of reach — even though we know it is critically important to overall health. And for far too long, despite strong support from voters, candidates and policymakers have consistently put “access to oral health” on the backburner. This election cycle, we need to change that. 
Ensuring children have access to oral health care is a local challenge in many parts of the country. “Maine has reached a low in access to care like we’ve never seen,” says Courtney Vannah, IDPH, MS, MPH, senior program manager at MCD Global Health, a nonprofit dedicated to improving the health and well-being of people worldwide. “Children in Maine have long faced challenges in access to dental care within the traditional dental care delivery model.” 
By Caroline McLeod, MS, RDH, Value-Based Solutions Manager at CareQuest Institute, and Andrea Clark, MS, Director, Health Care Economics at CareQuest Institute al·ter·na·tive: of one or more things available as another possibility. Reusable water bottles as an alternative to single-use plastic bottles. Oat milk as an alternative to dairy milk. An electric toothbrush as an alternative to a manual toothbrush. 
In 2024, CareQuest Institute has awarded more than $8.3 million in grants to organizations that are helping underserved populations gain better access to oral health care. That work, core to CareQuest Institute’s DNA, is focused on the oral health system. Help, of course, is needed in other areas, too — in housing, in disease research, in community-based organizations that are committed to change. Every sector of society needs a boost. 
Robert MacArthur, DMD, is well aware of how a patient could feel uncomfortable sitting in a dental chair. “Dentistry is an extremely invasive profession,” MacArthur says. “It requires a lot of trust, and it’s really humbling when I put myself in the dental chair at least twice a year just for a regular cleaning. It’s good to be reminded of how invasive it can be.” 
Last month, the Oral Health Progress and Equity Network (OPEN) brought together 170 oral health advocates to discuss how to engage with candidates and the media this election season and raise oral health as a key issue. Experts in advocacy, community engagement, and media shared their insights and tips with attendees at the 2024 OPEN Advocacy Assembly. “It’s tough to find an issue like this in today’s America that has broad popularity,” said Peter Mitchell, chief insights officer at Marketing for Change. 
By Caroline McLeod, MS, RDH, Value-Based Solutions Manager at CareQuest Institute 
By Kaz Rafia, DDS, MBA, MPH, Chief Dental Officer and Executive Vice President of Health Equity, CareQuest Institute As we began creating self-paced courses for CareQuest Institute, we took a closer look at terminology in oral health care — terms like “value-based payment,” “fee-for-service,” “interoperability,” and “care coordination.” One phrase continued to give us pause and generate thoughtful discussion: social determinants of health. 
By Stacey Auger, MPH, policy consultant, CareQuest Institute Oral health has been in the national spotlight recently thanks to a May 16 hearing of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP). The focus of the hearing was the dental crisis facing the US and how to make dental care more affordable and available to all. 
As a filmmaker, Paul Gibbs tells other people’s stories for a living. He didn’t know his own story — about trying to access oral health care — would have such a profound impact. “My dental care experience turned out to be much more expensive, invasive, and painful than it needed to be,” Gibbs says. “And it was because while my doctors had recognized that oral health is part of the overall larger picture, my insurance didn’t.”