- Tens of millions of older Americans who cannot afford dental care may soon get help as Democrats maneuver to add dental benefits to Medicare for the first time in its history.
- The New York Times reports that the proposal would be among the most significant changes to Medicare since its creation in 1965.
- On Capitol Hill, the proposal to add a Medicare dental benefit has near-universal support among Democrats, and many health industries and consumer groups back it, too. The main opposition comes from dentists.
- The American Dental Association wants Medicare dental benefits to be offered only to poorer patients, offered by private insurers, and included in its special part of Medicare.
- Medicare would most likely pay lower prices than older patients who can now afford to pay, a potential hit to dental income.
- With the $3.5 trillion package, lawmakers hope to add dental benefits to Medicare and vision and hearing coverage.
- Price Action: Watching shares of SmileDirectClub Inc SDC up 12.90% at $5.85 during the market session on the last check Monday.
© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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