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Good Luck and hang in there. You are not a bad son, this is a very hard situation we find ourselves in.
Removing all teeth for the heck of it is plain stupid. Any that can be fixed should be which can be done under local anesthetic and extractions done with anesthetic.
Each case is unique ut unless someone is actively dying every effort should be made to treat the problem without going overboard.
So many folks chimed in with advice and experiences I thought I’d put out the latest news.
I talked to mom’s old dentist last week. He the called the AL and arranged for her transport to his office today.
He called me about noon. It went very well. He easily ground off a couple jagged edges on two teeth and sent her own her way. He’s refusing to let me pay for his services. She’s been a patient of his for 40 years, it was really nothing etc........
Such a relief. So gang.....Whats a good gift to send to the dentists office? Small place. Maybe 3 people..Fruit basket? Home Depot cards?
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Most states Medicaid dental is only within CHIP - the children’s healthcare program - and geared for prevention which can be done by other than a DDS or DMD. Usually in large mobile units - own by the state but in partnership with a children’s hospital & a dental school- which travel to schools or other community sites. CHIP has a dedicated federal coshare for prevention programs & kids dental can get paid through this so for states it’s a nobrainer to include. Kids dental is mainly visual check up, annual bite wings & paint the incoming teeth.... costs minimal as most work done by a tech but effective long term. Adult dental requires actual dentist time and usually it’s specialist work so it’s expensive plus with medication and sedation, $$$!
Dentures get recommended as those are covered by Medicare. Medicare will pay a set fee for removal & dentures. The only other way MediCARE pays for any dental - to my knowledge- is if the breakage / damage is due to a major trauma that your hospitalized for & being covered by Medicare. So like your 70 & in a major car crash with shattered jaw; the dental reconstruction can be covered by Medicare assuming you find a oral surgeon and dentist who take Original Medicare or are in your Medicare Advantage Plan that has dental providers. But other than that, dental is all private pay. For my mom, she did a huge spend down in dental the decade before entering a NH... got implants, full front bridgework, replaced vintage fillings, gum tx’s; she had the $$ and for her situation, it was $$ well spent. But if she was in a facility and already in dementia mode, like Windyridges’ mom, I wouldn’t have encouraged it.
As an aside on this, when Medicare was being written into law in the 60’s, dentists were left out of any planning. It was a combo of issues as to why.... dentistry then wasn’t at all what it is now; back then loosing teeth was expected part of aging and folks just got dentures or did without teeth; & AMA wanted Medicare to be all about physicians; & AHA wanted it all about care in a hospital. The ADA didn’t present an active organized front to have dental as a part of Medicare. If an “oral surgeon” was needed, those rare guys were dentists who went onto a ENT or Head&Neck speciality residency at a Health Science center (has a medical school), so their DMD’s rather than just a storefront solo practice DDS. Most MDs never ever work with dentists, they usually do not have admitting privileges at hospitals, so got left out of the planning process. Not to insult you dentists or dentists spouses or hygienists reading this, but back then being a DDS was way way below MD status. Dental school was the default for those who had less than great MCAT, no family/alumni connection and couldn’t do the foreign medical school grad approach to being a MD or do PH.D program. Nevertheless at least Dentures were included for coverage in Medicare planning.
DO NOT FEEL GUILTY.
Get the Dentist's diagnosis in writing along with xrays to consult with Oral Surgeon AND her doctor FIRST.
Yes, abscess are extremely bad no matter one's age, but especially your Mother's.
If these should rupture the infection will enter her blood stream and it is the heart that is effected the most.
Do you need to take penicillin before having any dental work done? If so, it's so you have a greater chance of not having an infection happen and mostly due to some type of heart issue.
I'm lucky enough that I don't have to yet, but I did end up with a rare infection caused by the hygentist accidentally getting too close to the salivary glands which is where you have lymph nodes under your tongue. Suck them dry with that suction wand. I hold it and contol now.
I ended up in the hospital immediately after I had to go to an ENT because I could not swallow and my throat was swelling to the point I would have died within the week if I had ignored it.
You're in a no win situation too.
The infection that could happen and doing the procedure at her age is also a danger due to anesthesia.
Opinions are like butt holes; we all have one. My opinion is to consult with the 3 doctors, but I would have the removal done. At her age, they may not fit her for dentures either. It may be better that she be placed on a soft food diet with supplements like Assure.
I agree with a lot of other people. I would go slow and want to know why each tooth needs to be pulled right now.
Reminds me that when my mother was in her 80's she wouldn't go to the dentist. She pulled her own teeth. My mother was tough.
When my husband gained guardianship two years ago, he took her to a dentist. The dentist said there was very mild infection, but it would be too traumatic to pull the other broken teeth, and could cause her more harm than good (risk of anesthesia at her age, infection, inability to eat). She was eating a soft diet well. He said if she complained of mouth pain, to bring her back, and only then would he consider doing something, if the benefit of treatment outweighed the risk.
Sounds like you received excellent responses! I wouldn't have my Mom's teeth pulled either.
I had 8 teeth pulled for a denture a couple of years ago and I used a product called Nature's Answer PerioBrite Cleanse which helped heal my gums and prevented infection. I don't know if your Mom would rinse with this but I just wanted to mention it because it helped me.
Jenna
The AL is arranging to take mom to her old dentist. I talked to him yesterday. He’s going to grind off the rough edges. Done......
As luck would have it, they forced my hand when they made me leave him alone in the waiting room to pay $103. He was supposed to return in 3 days for the work. I totally freaked. After 28 years with them, they couldn't trust me 3 days for $103.
Went across the highway and found another dentist that rebuilt 2 of the teeth - pulled nothing - for 1/3 the cost.
Get your 2nd opinion.
P.S. The dentist who told me I would lose my teeth is out of business, or I would have taken him to court!