Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health (ARCPOH) - Published Papers
Government subsidies for dental care in Australia.
Harford J, Spencer AJ.
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the impact of recent changes in
public subsidies for oral health care in Australia, and to propose more effective and equitable uses of Commonwealth
Government subsidies. METHODS: Review of literature and Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health
information. RESULTS: Commonwealth subsidies for oral health care services in Australia have been moved from public
dental services to private dental health insurance. This has resulted in a redistribution of funds from people on
low incomes with poor oral health, to people on middle to high incomes with relatively better oral health. CONCLUSIONS:
Public funding for dental care in Australia favours the financially and orally better off at the expense of
disadvantaged and orally unhealthy Australians. Current approaches to public funding for oral health services in
Australia are unlikely to result in a substantial improvement in oral health. IMPLICATIONS: Maximum gains in oral
health are likely to be achieved by a reorientation of Commonwealth subsidies towards preventive and basic treatment
services. This reorientation needs to occur within a primary health care framework. Whereas the Commonwealth plays a
national leadership role in the provision of general health services, this is not apparent in relation to oral health.
This lack of leadership leaves many vulnerable Australians without basic preventive services and at high risk of
losing teeth that might otherwise have been preserved. Channelling the funding now used to subsidise private dental
services for the well off and dentally healthy to community-wide and targeted preventive services for vulnerable and
low-income Australians would have a larger impact on oral health and represent a more equitable use of these funds.