The federal government will pour $4 billion into a dental package to provide millions of children and millions of adults on low incomes or in rural areas access to government-subsidised dental care.
Health Minister Tanya Plibersek this morning announced that more than 3 million children would be eligible for the scheme, which will begin in 2014.
For adults on low incomes, $1.3 billion to fund an additional 1.4 million services will be available in the six-year package.
The changes have been made possible with the support of the Greens, who have insisted on big expansion as grounds for axing the current Medicare chronic disease dental scheme costing about $1 billion a year.
The funding comes on top of the $515 million announced in the 2012-13 budget.
''Labor believes we have a responsibility to ensure Australians who are least able to afford to go to the dentist, and particularly children, should be given access to government-subsidised oral healthcare,'' Ms Plibersek said.
Greens health spokesman Richard Di Natale flanked Ms Plibersek when she made the announcement in Sydney.
Ms Plibersek said the ‘‘unprecedented’’ package would tackle increasingly poor dental health among low-income people.
Eligible children would be able to get basic dental treatment capped at $1000 a child over two years to address dental decay, which, she said, had been increasing since the 1990s in Australia.
The package includes $2.7 billion for the treatment of children.
“While Medicare and free hospital care have been a basic right for Australians for decades, millions of people in this country still go without adequate dental care,” Ms Plibersek said.
The government would also provide $1.3 billion to states and territories for expanded dental services for low-income adults, but the funding would depend on their at least maintaining current levels of dental services.
There would also be $225 million for dental infrastructure and workforce expansion in outer metropolitan and regional and rural areas.
Ms Plibersek said the public dental scheme would now be able to focus on prevention measures.
‘‘Many more low-income Australians will be able to get not just crisis treatment, when their teeth are falling out or gums abscessing, but actually moving back to a period ... of prevention and early intervention,’’ she said.
‘‘The investment today will bear rewards in 10, 20, 30 years' time.’’
Senator Di Natale said that for a wealthy country, Australians had poor oral health.
‘‘Poor oral health leads to a range of complications ... one in 10 visits to the GP are because people can’t afford to see a dentist,’’ he said.
Ms Plibersek confirmed the government would close the Chronic Disease Dental Scheme, set up by Opposition Leader Tony Abbott when he was health minister under the Howard government.
‘‘It’s been one of the most widely misused schemes ever designed in our public health system,’’ she said. ‘‘I’m very pleased to see the back of it.’’
The scheme was initially estimated by the Howard government to cost $90 million a year
, but massive overservicing and rorting had led to it costing $80 million a month
, Ms Plibersek said.
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