Pubdate: Mon, 09 May 2005 Source: Argus Leader (SD) Copyright: 2005 Argus Leader Contact: http://www.argusleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/842 Author: Denise D Tucker and Jennifer Sanderson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) 'METH MOUTH' COSTS COUNTY Drug Wears Out Teeth, Budget For Dental Care The cost for dental treatment for inmates in the Minnehaha County Jail has nearly doubled during the past two years, due in part to a side effect of methamphetamine abuse - a condition called meth mouth. "Our dentist tells us as soon as they (inmates) open up their mouths, he is able to recognize the rotting and brittle teeth, all symptoms of meth mouth," Sheriff Mike Milstead said. Many of the teeth become unsalvageable, said assistant sheriff Michelle Boyd.In 2002, Minnehaha County paid $18,000 for dental treatment for inmates. The cost grew to $32,000 in 2004, Milstead said. Dental costs are a part of the overall medical budget. "Correctional facilities across America, in particular in areas where methamphetamine use is on the rise, are being hit with the financial realities of meth abuse," he said.It's inflating the cost of locking up meth addicts, according to law enforcement officials nationwide. "The costs just go on and on," Wisconsin Attorney General Peggy Lautenschlager said of meth's impact on prison budgets. "Dental costs alone are skyrocketing." In Coffee County, Tenn., Sheriff Steve Graves said meth-addicted inmates are depleting the money he has budgeted for prisoners' tooth and gum problems."It's not uncommon for us to take a vanload at a time to the dentist," he said. The additional financial burden comes at a time when many states are struggling to balance their budgets and the federal government is cutting back funding for local drug-fighting programs.The Bush administration, which has recommended cutting money for local anti-meth programs, does not have national figures on the drug's economic toll. "We just don't track this data," said Jennifer DeVallance, a spokeswoman for the Office of National Drug Control Policy. Methamphetamine is the fastest-growing drug threat in the nation, according to federal officials. As the meth epidemic has swept eastward from California and the Pacific Northwest, it has created unique - and expensive - - problems in a variety of areas.The South Dakota Department of Corrections also is experiencing rising dental costs. The number of inmates in prison rose from 2,781 in fiscal year 2002 to 3,059 in fiscal year 2004, according to the state DOC. During that same time, the average per-inmate expenditure for dental care went from $238.69 to $239.36, an increase of 67 cents.In state fiscal year 2004, 22 percent of male state prison inmates and 15 percent of female state prison inmates had a primary diagnosis of amphetamine dependence, according to the DOC. "When you think about the ingredients (anhydrous ammonia, phenyl acetone and battery acid) that go into making meth, it's caustic," Milstead said. "It's no wonder that these people's teeth are literally falling out of their gums. "And in my conversations with physicians, the devastating effects these toxic chemicals have on teeth could be the tip of the iceberg on the long-term effects on an abuser's general health."Meth use triggers a cycle that aggravates base causes of problems in healthy mouths. Intentionally or not, addicts frequently ingest large amounts of sugar because meth leaves a cottonball feeling in the mouth. "They're always drinking pop or sucking on hard candy" to stimulate salivary glands, said Lonna Jones, a dental hygienist and supervisor for the Sioux River Valley Community Dental Clinic. "They don't know that's what they're trying to do, but that's why their bodies need them to do it."Jones deals with the lingering effects of meth mouth after patients have decided to clean up. At the downtown public health center, a city/county partnership, Jones sees the tell-tale signs: excessive decay on unlikely tooth surfaces. "It's the facial surfaces, the part of the teeth you see when someone smiles or talks during an interview to try to get a job," Jones said. That's atypical for dental patients as a whole, who most often get cavities in the pitted chewing surfaces of their molars. The anterior teeth, or those at the front of the bite's arc, are less dense than those tough molars and wear away more quickly.Six months of meth use may be enough to cause irreparable damage, Jones said. "The decay is much more serious with meth" than that found in those who smoke cigarettes or use chewing tobacco, she said.And unlike the dental problems that follow those addictions, meth mouth isn't confined to the drug's user. It's a communicable disease. "If you have a parent or other caregiver with rampant decay, and they kiss their baby on the lips, they can pass it to the child," Jones said. "We preach that all day long. Even if they won't stop or get help for themselves, there's the hope that they'll do it for their children." Widespread abuse has catapulted meth into the national spotlight as a public health hazard. The community dental clinic opened in 2001, and Jones said cases of meth mouth have steadily increased."It has a huge impact on our entire way of living," she said. "Almost as soon as they start using, they're unemployable. And that puts them on welfare." Few patients deny previous meth habits."Most will say, 'Oh, yeah, I got into it and it ruined my teeth,' " Jones said. By then, it's often too late for any remedy other than extraction - a cost-effective way to permanently relieve pain via the pinched Medicaid budget. Those payments, which together with Medicare made up 36 percent of the Community Health Clinic's revenue last year, don't cover more expensive restoration or cosmetic therapies. A root canal might run $700 to $1,000, with the crown to follow at another $600 or so. "That's for just one tooth," Jones said, "and it's usually seven or eight" that need care when meth mouth's involved.Milstead said his department will have to consider the cost of meth mouth when it puts together its next budget. "We're about to start our budget process with the county commission," he said. "And like other line items in our budget, we'll need to sit down and review our medical expenses knowing what kind of impact methamphetamines are having on our inmates, and work to predict what our best estimate for our medical expenses will be for 2006." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth