LARGO – When 12-year-old Deamonte Driver died last February from what began as an untreated toothache, Gov. Martin O’Malley said it was a moment of “personal shame for the people of Maryland.”
Thursday, the governor joined with health care advocates, practitioners and other officials in what they called a celebration, announcing strides made in the name of children’s dental health care in Maryland, including a mobile dental clinic bearing Driver’s name.
“There is no way to ever be able to call out the names of the little boys and little girls whose lives will be spared because of the way this tragedy in your son’s life inspired us to come together,” said O’Malley, addressing Driver’s mother.
Driver, a Prince George’s County child, died of an untreated infection that spread from a tooth to his brain. Driver’s family, who did not have health insurance, was unable to find a dentist who would treat him.
The state-funded mobile office for Prince George’s County, named the Deamonte Driver Dental Project, will visit nine local schools in an effort to screen and treat low-income and underserved children needing dental care. The project comes with a $288,000 price tag for its first year of services.
The director of the dental project, Hazel Harper, said she hopes the new initiative will serve to increase awareness of the link between dental health and general health. She also wants the program to become a model for the nation.
Members of a dental action committee appointed by the governor announced that 90 new dentists in Maryland have signed up to be Medicaid dental providers.
The state devoted $14 million in the fiscal year 2009 budget, following recommendations of the dental action committee, to raise reimbursement rates for dentists treating children with Medicaid coverage.
Prior to the change, many dentists would not treat Medicaid patients because compensation rates for care were so low.
At the event, O’Malley was presented with an award recognizing his personal efforts aimed at improving children’s dental health care, but he was quick to downplay the accolades.
“With all due respect and gratitude for the award, this is not the time to shoot off the confetti canons,” said O’Malley, who noted that 300,000 Maryland children are still waiting to receive the dental care they need.
The day’s most personal announcement came when one official said that Alyce Driver, Deamonte Driver’s mother, graduated from the dental assistant program at Prince George’s Community College Wednesday.
Afterward, a tearful and nearly speechless Alyce Driver was proud so much progress had been made in her son’s name.