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Libby health center awarded $350,000

Daily Inter Lake | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 8 years, 11 months AGO
by Daily Inter Lake
| June 20, 2016 11:00 AM

Lincoln County Community Health Center will receive $350,000 from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as part of a national effort to increase dental health services in rural communities.

Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia M. Burwell announced on Thursday that Libby was one of three health centers in Montana that received a portion of the $1,050,000 set aside for the effort.

“Oral health is an important part of our overall physical health and well-being,” Burwell said in a prepared statement. “The funding we are awarding will reduce barriers to quality dental care for hundreds of thousands of Americans by bringing new oral health providers to health centers across the country.”

The funding aims to increase access to integrated oral health care services and increase the number of patients served.

Other clinics in Montana receiving grants are Bighorn Valley Health Center in Hardin and Yellowstone City-County Health Department in Billings.

Nationwide, Thursday’s announcement included nearly $156 million in funding to support 420 health centers in 47 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.

With the awards from the Health Resources and Services Administration, health centers across the country could increase oral health service by hiring roughly 1,600 new dentists, dental hygienists, assistants, aides, and technicians to treat a target of 785,000 new patients.

The department’s Acting Administrator Jim Macrae said oral health problems can be a sign of illness elsewhere in the body.

Lack of access to preventive and routine dental care for underserved populations can also result in dental conditions requiring more costly emergency dental treatment.

“HRSA will continue to explore ways to further integrate oral health services within primary care settings, and increase awareness of the connection between oral health and overall health,” Macrae said.

Today, nearly 1,400 health centers operate approximately 9,800 service delivery sites in every U.S. state, D.C., Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands and the Pacific Basin. In 2014, those health centers employed more than 3,700 dentists, 1,600 dental hygienists and 7,400 dental assistants, technicians and aides. They served about 4.7 million dental patients and provided nearly 12 million oral health visits.

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