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Wellness
Hong KongHealth & Environment

Access to dental care set to be widened for Hong Kong’s elderly as lower age for subsidy scheme proposed

Task force puts forward another lowering of minimum age, to 70, but lack of services still a barrier

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Many elderly residents have to wake up at dawn just to beat the crowds and see a dentist. Photo: Sam Tsang
Ernest Kao

More elderly residents in Hong Kong could gain access to vital dental care services with the age limit for a government subsidy scheme set to be lowered even further in the coming months.

An additional 24,600 senior citizens benefited from the Commission on Poverty’s decision to lower the age requirement for the Community Care Fund scheme last September, from 80 to 75.

Fund task force chairman, Dr Law Chi-kwong, said during a radio programme on Wednesday that another adjustment to the age criteria, from 75 to 70, was in the works.

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But even with the age requirement lowered, the capacity of Hong Kong dental services is still a limiting factor.

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“Other than NGO dental clinics, ‘community care dentists’ are only charging the government up to cost recovery,” he said. “So the capacity to provide [more] services is quite limited.”

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