NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) 鈥 For months, Carlton Clemons endured crippling pain from a rotting wisdom tooth. He couldn鈥檛 sleep, barely ate and relied on painkillers to get by.

The 67-year-old from Nashville, Tennessee, could not afford to see a dentist on the $1,300-a-month his family gets in Social Security and disability payments. So he waited for the state to roll out a program this year that offers dental care to the more than 650,000 Medicaid recipients like him who are 21 and older. Tennessee is spending about $75 million annually on the program.

鈥淢an, I thought I had made it to heaven because the pain was over,鈥 he said after the tooth was pulled in July at the Meharry Medical College School of Dentistry. 鈥淲hen they did pull it out, I was so happy. I was so glad. Everything just changed after that.鈥

His wife, Cindy, who also is on Medicaid, has had her teeth pulled at the clinic.

Medicaid, the federal and state health insurance program for the poor, . But with a growing recognition of the economic and health costs of poor dental health and an influx of federal pandemic dollars, six states began or expanded their Medicaid programs this year to provide coverage for adults.

Access remains difficult in many of those states with some dentists refusing to treat Medicaid patients. Even those who want to expand their practice are finding themselves caught up in red tape.

Dr. Victor Wu, the chief medical officer for Tennessee鈥檚 Medicaid program, said he was pleased with the rollout of Medicaid dental benefits that started in January, but he acknowledges the state needs to build out its network and increase the participation rate among dentists.

While dental care often is seen as routine, the poor often go without any care for years or even decades. Doing so has significant costs, both to taxpayers and to those who cannot afford treatment.

One study from Texas A&M University found that treatment for preventable dental conditions represents up to 2.5% of emergency room visits, at a cost of $2 billion a year. An additional $45 billion is lost year in productivity in the United States annually from untreated oral disease, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

鈥淵ou put off care and you get sicker and then it becomes a crisis where you鈥檙e missing work or you end up going to the emergency department where you get a big bill and you don鈥檛 get the tooth actually taken care of,鈥 said Dr. Rhonda Switzer-Nadasdi, the chief executive officer of Interfaith Dental Clinic which has offices in Nashville and Murfreesboro, Tennessee.

鈥淵ou need good teeth to have good employment,鈥 Switzer-Nadasdi said.

All states provide some Medicaid dental benefits for adults, but some limit it to only specific segments of the population, like pregnant women or those who have intellectual disabilities, or cover only emergency care, according to CareQuest Institute for Oral Health, a nonprofit that advocates for expanded dental care.

Hawaii, Tennessee, Kentucky, Michigan, Maryland and New Hampshire were the latest to begin or expand their dental coverage; they did so this year.

In New Hampshire, the state is spending $33.4 million over 12 months to provide dental care to its 88,000 Medicaid recipients.

鈥淭here is an increasing understanding that oral health is inseparable from health care,鈥 said New Hampshire Democratic Rep. Joe Schapiro, who was the prime sponsor of the expanded dental benefits bill. 鈥淭he amount of money spent on other health care problems that are related to oral health and the amount of money spent on emergency care when people can鈥檛 get any kind of preventive or restorative care is not only unfortunate for those people鈥檚 health but cost a tremendous amount of money.鈥

In Kentucky, Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear pressed ahead with emergency regulations ensuring that about 900,000 Kentuckians would continue having access to dental care after the Republican-led legislature rejected his proposal.

鈥淲e are focused on removing roadblocks that prevent people from getting back into the workforce, and this program does just that,鈥 he said.

budgeting $282 million for the 2022 and 2023 fiscal years to cover dental procedures for more than a million recipients. Last year, Kansas gave dental access to nearly 137,000 Medicaid recipients at a cost of $3.5 million in 2022 and $1.2 million in 2023.

While advocates are welcoming these changes, Texas, Alabama, Mississippi, Utah and Louisiana still only offer limited benefits. The Utah Legislature passed a bill to expand Medicaid dental coverage but is still waiting for federal approval to put it into effect.

Even as states add dental coverage, millions of beneficiaries are being culled from the Medicaid program nationwide as part of , something states were prohibited from doing during the pandemic.

There are also plenty of hiccups in states that have expanded care, including Tennessee. Among the biggest is that too few dentists, especially in rural areas, are taking Medicaid patients, resulting in long waiting times and hours-long drives in search of care. Only about 15% of dentist take Medicaid in New Hampshire, 24% in Tennessee and 27% in Virginia.

Many dentists and groups advocating for expanded care blame Medicaid reimbursement rates. New Jersey only covers 13.3% of what a dentists normally charge, Michigan covers 17% and Rhode Island 22.4%, according to 2022 data analyzed by the American Dental Association. Illinois, , Ohio and Oregon each cover a little more than 28%.

Most states, though, cover between 30% and 50% with Alaska and North Dakota covering at least 55% and Delaware, 76.9%.

Dr. Heather Taylor, an assistant professor at the Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at Indiana University, said some of Indiana鈥檚 Medicaid reimbursement rates for dental have not increased since 1998.

鈥淚t鈥檚 almost like we鈥檙e incentivizing our dentists not to treat the ones that are in need, because we don鈥檛 pay them even half of what they could get from private insurers,鈥 she said.

Tennessee Family Dental, which has four clinics in the state, has experienced overwhelming demand from Medicaid patients. Dr. Ryan O鈥橬eill, a dentist who owns the business, said he got some 300 calls on the first day and that some of his patients have traveled from 30 minutes away or more.

He wants to hire more dentists but said it can take upward of four months to get one certified under Medicaid. He also is struggling with a Medicaid billing system that routinely rejects some claims and he said there is 鈥渁 lot of inconsistency over what is approved and what is denied.鈥

鈥淥ffices are hesitant to go in network because there鈥檚 a lot of unknowns,鈥 O'Neill said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e still learning what the rules are and, you know, trial and error in terms of how we鈥檙e supposed to deal with a particular situation.鈥

Danielle Wilkes, a 26-year-old mother of five from Ashland, Tennessee, drove 90 minutes to see O鈥橬eill after calling dozens of dentists in her area and finding none who takes Medicaid. Her cousin, June Renee Pentecost, also came with her for treatment.

For the past five years, Wilkes had been waiting to see a dentist after getting several teeth knocked out in a car wreck. She was told it would cost her thousands of dollars for multiple crowns, which she could not afford.

鈥淚 was mad at first but I was like there nothing she could do. I鈥檓 just going to have to wait until my kids are grown up,鈥 she said, adding that the pain often brought her to tears.

But here she was in a dental chair, her pink hair standing out against O鈥橬eill and dental assistant Jasmine Webb in black scrubs. Afterward, the soft-spoken Wilkes said she was 鈥渏ust happy鈥 to finally get the work done, even if she had to pay $400 that Medicaid did not cover.

In a different room, Pentecost was getting examined for a root canal. It had been more than a decade since she last saw a dentist because she was deterred by the cost despite years of pain. A mother of five, she figured dental care would take away from spending on her children.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 play with my kids because my head was hurting," she said.

The 30-year-old was relieved to get the work done but wondered why the state had not offered the benefit sooner.

鈥淚鈥檓 hoping my pain would ease up and quit once I get my teeth fixed and then I won鈥檛 have so many headaches and feel so bad,鈥 she said.

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Associated Press writer Bruce Schreiner in Frankfort, Kentucky, contributed to this report.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

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