Across Ontario in 2012 there were almost 58,000 visits to hospital Emergency Rooms (ER) for oral health problems.

This is evidence that many people are using costly acute care ER for dental problems because they cannot afford dental treatment.

Public Health Ontario reports that 1 in every 5 Ontarians does not visit a dentist because they cannot afford the cost.

However, at the ER they can only get pain killers, not treatment to solve the problem. So many will return to ER.

Our research found that more people visit ER for dental problems than for diabetes problems.

This is a costly and inappropriate use of hospital ER.

Ontarians should be able to receive affordable preventative dental care in their communities. But OHIP does not cover our teeth and gums.

At a minimum cost of $513/visit, the total estimated cost for dental visits to ER in Ontario was at least $30million in 2012.

The Ontario Ministry of Health & Long Term Care set up Health Links in 2012 with one goal being to reduce avoidable ER visits. http://www.health.gov.on.ca/en/pro/programs/transformation/community.aspx

Dental visits to ER are avoidable. We need government investment in public dental programs for low income adults.

If low income people could get their oral health needs met at public clinics and Community Health Centres they would not be clogging up their local ER.

The Ontario government should re-direct the $30million (minimum estimate) spent on acute care for oral health in ERs to a pilot program to provide public oral health care for low income adults.