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Michigan Receives CDC Funds to Strengthen Oral Health
August 06, 2001
Michigan Department of Community Health Director, James K. Haveman, Jr., today announced that Michigan has received $130,422 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to strengthen oral health programs and reduce inequalities in oral health care. The CDC awarded a total of $1.2 million to Michigan, Arkansas, Illinois, Nevada, New York, and the Republic of Palau.
"We are so pleased to receive this important funding from the CDC to assist us in our efforts of ensuring people have access to good oral health care," said Haveman. "In Michigan we will use these dollars to strengthen the oral health program and better assess where the need for improved services exists."
"Good oral health is an important part of overall health," said Health and Human Services Secretary Tommy G. Thompson. "These grants will help these states build more effective preventive measures to improve oral health and reduce oral disease among their citizens."
Through the cooperative agreement, Michigan will receive $130,422 per year and it is renewable for up to five years. The funding is designed to improve basic state oral health services, including support for oral health program leadership, monitoring oral health behaviors and status, and evaluating prevention programs.
Michigan will conduct a baseline assessment of oral health services in partnership with the University of Michigan School of Public Health and establish an ongoing surveillance system to monitor oral health. The department will also provide support to local communities for assessing and planning oral health programs, and will provide health education on the benefits of preventive treatment.
About 500 million dental visits occur annually in the United States and an estimated $64 billion was spent on dental services in 2000.