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Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Division of Oral Health
Mail Stop F-10
4770 Buford Highway NE
Atlanta, GA 30341

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Cooperative Agreements to Strengthen State Oral Disease Prevention Programs

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced that five states and one territory will receive a total of $1.2 million to strengthen their oral health programs and reduce inequalities in the oral health of their residents. Included are: Arkansas, Illinois, Michigan, Nevada, New York, and the Republic of Palau.

"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."

These new cooperative agreements range from $60,577 to $300,000 per year and are renewable for up to five years. For all six, the funding is designed to improve basic state oral health services, including support for oral health program leadership and additional staff, monitoring oral health behaviors and status, and evaluating prevention programs. Nevada and Arkansas will receive additional funds to develop and coordinate community water fluoridation or school-based dental sealant programs.

"These new awards were developed in direct response to what state oral health leaders told us they needed to improve the oral health of their citizenry," states Dr. William R. Maas, director of CDC’s oral health program. "The funds will assist these states to develop oral health plans, establish oral health coalitions to raise public awareness about the critical importance of good oral health, and implement monitoring systems to determine whether the states’ oral health objectives are being met and to target new initiatives."

"The new activities in these states will move us closer to building some of the framework noted in last year’s Surgeon General’s Report, Oral Health In America, and to reducing and eliminating high rates of oral disease in children and adults," Maas said.

About 500 million dental visits occur annually in the United States and an estimated $64 billion was spent on dental services in 2000. The CDC oral health program seeks to improve the oral health of communities by extending the use of proven strategies to prevent oral diseases, enhancing monitoring of oral diseases, strengthening the nation's oral health capacity, and guiding infection control in dentistry.

 

Historical Document
Page last reviewed: June 1, 2007
Content source: Division of Oral Health, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

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