Saturday, May 31, 2025

The Dental Care Shortfall in the Southeast

March 31, 2025, data from the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) revealed that more than 59.7 million Americans lived in communities or settings designated as dental health professional shortage areas (HPSA).  This designation is given to population groups, geographic areas, or facilities where with access to dental care is limited because too few dentists serve the HPSA relative to the size of its population.  Southeastern U.S dental HPSA's were home to over 22.7 million residents, accounting for just over 38% of the entire U.S. population that lived in dental care shortfall areas.  The HRSA estimates that HPSAs in the Southeast would need 4,018 more dentists in order to eliminate the dental care shortfall in the region.  Here is a state-level summary of the Southeast's dental care shortfall:

The Dental Care Shortfall in the Southeast

The Dental Care Shortfall in the Southeast

State (1) HPSAs (2) Population (3) Shortfall
AL 89 751,675 137
AR 132 580,085 103
FL 274 5,911,481 1,259
GA 184 1,963,457 411
KY 208 922,811 209
LA 163 1,869,995 252
MS 148 1,401,634 178
NC 189 2,911,480 576
SC 90 1,557,360 221
TN 143 1,941,163 314
VA 131 2,182,344 223
WV 117 749,549 135
Region 1,868 22,743,034 4,018
U.S. 7,054 59,718,174 10,143

(1) Designated Geographic, Population Group, and Facility HPSAs with a dental care shortfall
(2) Population of designated HPSAs
(3) Dental Care practitioners needed to remove HPSA Designation

Source:  Designated HPSA Quarterly Summary, 3/31/25 (HRSA)

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