Alabama
Related: About this forumIn a small Alabama town, a dentist weighs whether to stop treating kids on Medicaid
FLORENCE, Ala. Sometimes, in a quiet moment between appointments, Dr. Carson Cruise runs the financial numbers through his head. They make a cold but compelling case: If he dropped all of the Medicaid patients from his small-town pediatric dental practice, he could make the same money while working far fewer hours.
Cruise, 36, owns a dental clinic in the picturesque Alabama town of Florence, home to the University of North Alabama, tucked into the rural northwest corner of the state. He and his wife have two little boys, ages 3 and 5. They sold their small family farm recently because it became too difficult to keep up with it and his practice and still have time for their family.
All of his patients are children. About half of them have their dental care covered by Medicaid, the joint federal-state health insurance program for people with low incomes. They come to his clinic from across the region, he says, and some parents drive from rural communities an hour away. Hes got a waitlist four or five months long.
I have great relationships with a lot of these families Ive been seeing for years, he said. I dont want to leave them hanging, but its getting to a point where its really difficult to keep working at the pace were working and seeing the volume that were seeing.
Even though more than half of Alabama children are enrolled in Medicaid, Cruise said he is the only board-certified pediatric dentist in the area who still accepts it.
https://stateline.org/2025/10/23/in-a-small-alabama-town-a-dentist-weighs-whether-to-stop-treating-kids-on-medicaid/
timms139
(420 posts)he add a staff member to take on the extra load so the children won't be left behind in dental care. I would think if he has that much business it would make since to share the load with someone rather than just shut out those who need the service he offers .
mike_c
(36,810 posts)Hiring another staff member for x dollars annually when the income stream is x/2 over the same interval is a recipe for bankruptcy. I cannot imagine that Alabama pays enough for Medicaid patients to actually reimburse the costs of their care.
NNadir
(36,788 posts)...and the state is deep red?