In the past 6 months I have had to change dentists twice - dental practices in my area are opting out of the AARP branded United Health Care MA dental networks. UHC, and by extension, AARP, have selected Dentemax as the underwriter for their dental coverage and both practices tell me that they can no longer accept the low reimbursements from AARP/UHC. And while my plan pays the same for in-network and out of network dentists, out of network doesn't have negotiated rates and leaves me on the hook for the difference. Plus, zero deductible benefits (annual checkups, cleanings, etc.) "may" incur additional costs (according to AARP/UHC). That means "will."
I understand that there are still literally hundreds of dentists in my area that WILL accept the Dentemax arrangement, but this looks to be an ever-shrinking and evermore desperate pool of providers. That's not a formula for quality care, and no, AARP, I'm not interested in having my concern tossed over the transom to the UHC side. Your name is on it, I bought it because of your reputation.
My real question is why doesn't AARP address this? I can't be the first member they've heard from on this issue. I'm willing to pay (slightly) more for coverage that is actually a usable benefit, but I'm not willing to continuously change dentists every time somebody wises up. This is a perfect opportunity for AARP to say "We listen to our membership and recognize that this is a problem. So AARP/UHC plans will now offer this new dental benefit that cost a bit more but serves our members better."
Instead, we get crickets, and another "how not to get scammed" article. Ironic.