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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Garcia, MH
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
01/30/08
HB 442
SHORT TITLE Dona Ana Mobile Dental Clinic
SB
ANALYST Geisler
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$330.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Related to: HJM 12 and HB 419
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Department of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 442 would appropriate $330 thousand from the general fund to the Department of
Health (DOH) in Fiscal Year 2009 to operate a mobile dental clinic that will provide dental care
to uninsured and underinsured low-income children in Dona Ana County. Any unexpended
balance remaining at the end of FY 2009 shall revert to the General Fund.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
DOH notes the funding in HB 442 was not included in DOH’s Executive Budget. HB 442 would
allocate $330,000 to operate a mobile dental health clinic in Dona Ana County. However,
factoring in the first year cost of the vehicle this amount may be insufficient. The Mobile Health
Clinics Network estimates that, to outfit and operate a basic two-chair mobile dental clinic, the
cost would be in excess of $500,000. This includes first-time expenses for construction, staffing
and operational expenses. In subsequent years, the annual cost to operate and maintain the
mobile dental health clinic would be a minimum of $300,000.
Laws 2007, Chapter 42, Section 65 contains $56,000 in General Fund capital appropriations to
the Department of Health to “purchase and equip a vehicle for a mobile dental clinic in Dona
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House Bill 442 -- Page
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Ana County." To date, nothing has been done with these funds because the cost significantly
exceeds $56,000. The capital funding expires on June 30, 2011.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
DOH notes that while oral health disease may be the most preventable health condition affecting
the U.S. population, the oral health of minority populations and the underserved remains poor.
(Centers for Disease Control NHANES IV Report) Tooth decay is the most common childhood
disease, being five times more common than asthma. Annually, 56 million school hours are lost
as a result of dental disease among children. The 2000 New Mexico Children’s Oral Health
Surveillance Survey (NMOHSS) Report has identified that 65% of New Mexico children have
experienced tooth decay and 37% have untreated tooth decay.
A serious shortage of dental providers exists throughout the state. Most of the counties, either in
specific populations or the entire county, have been designated as dental health professional
shortage areas. These include the southern counties of Lea, Eddy, Otero, portions of Dona Ana,
Luna, Hidalgo, and low-income populations of Grant and Sierra.
The intent of HB 442 is to establish a mobile dental health clinic to provide services to children
in Dona Ana County who do not have dental insurance, are low-income, at high risk for dental
disease and may not have the ability to visit a traditional dental office. The bill would be
strengthened by clarifying whether funds could be used to purchase, as well as operate, a mobile
unit.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
DOH notes that should HB 442 be enacted, additional employees would be required to staff the
mobile dental clinic, including one FTE dentist, one FTE dental hygienist, one FTE dental
assistant and one FTE driver. Other expenditures include vehicle maintenance and storage,
dental supplies, administrative coordination of scheduling, and record keeping.
RELATIONSHIP
HB 442 relates to HJM 12, which would request the New Mexico Health Policy Commission and
the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center to study the establishment of a Dental
School in New Mexico.
HB 442 also relates to HB 419, which would appropriate $100,000 from the General Fund to
DOH in Fiscal Year 2009 to contract with a nonprofit company to provide dental services to
underserved children statewide who have little access to dental health professionals and who are
at high risk for dental disease.
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