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- Health Care Access, Use, and Content of Care for Low Income Children
How Well Is CHIP Addressing Oral Health Care Needs and Access for Children?
Academic PediatricsVol. 15Issue 3SupplementS78–S84Published online: March 25, 2015- Lisa Clemans-Cope
- Genevieve Kenney
- Timothy Waidmann
- Michael Huntress
- Nathaniel Anderson
Cited in Scopus: 4We examine how access to and use of oral and dental care under the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) compared to private coverage and being uninsured in 10 states. - Children's Oral Health
Predictors of Unmet Dental Need in Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder: Results From a National Sample
Academic PediatricsVol. 14Issue 6p624–631Published in issue: November, 2014- Christy M. McKinney
- Travis Nelson
- JoAnna M. Scott
- Lisa J. Heaton
- Matthew G. Vaughn
- Charlotte W. Lewis
Cited in Scopus: 32Unmet dental need in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is common. We tested hypotheses that lacking a medical home or having characteristics of more severe ASD is positively associated with having unmet dental need among children with ASD. - Access and Barriers to Care
Dental Care and Children with Special Health Care Needs: A Population-Based Perspective
Academic PediatricsVol. 9Issue 6p420–426Published in issue: November, 2009- Charlotte W. Lewis
Cited in Scopus: 82This paper grew out of a project reviewing progress in children's oral health after Oral Health in America: A Report of the Surgeon General was published in 2000. It includes a summary of advances in national surveillance of children with special health care needs (CSHCN), and presents more recent data on unmet dental care need among CSHCN. To that end, we used the 2006 National Survey of Children with Special Health Care Needs to determine the prevalence of unmet dental care need among CSHCN and to compare this within subgroups of CSHCN, as well as to children without special health care needs, and to results from the previous iteration of this survey. - Policy Achievements and Challenges
Putting Teeth in CHIP: 1997–2009 Retrospective of Congressional Action on Children's Oral Health
Academic PediatricsVol. 9Issue 6p467–475Published online: October 26, 2009- Burton L. Edelstein
Cited in Scopus: 12When Congress reenacted the Child Health Insurance Program (CHIP) in 2009, it incorporated a range of dental provisions that had not been considered when the program was initiated in 1997. This paper posits that this change evidences the establishment of pediatric oral health as a distinct policy issue within Congressional deliberations. During this period, the US Congress received impetus for action on behalf of children's oral health from multiple streams of activity: the Surgeon General's Report, Oral Health in America, policies enacted by states, advocacy by the professions, promotion by policy groups, attention by the press, and actions of federal agencies.