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Dive into the research topics where Susan C. McKernan is active.

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Featured researches published by Susan C. McKernan.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2013

Geographic accessibility and utilization of orthodontic services among Medicaid children and adolescents

Susan C. McKernan; Raymond A. Kuthy; Elizabeth T. Momany; Michelle R. McQuistan; Paul F. Hanley; Michael P. Jones; Peter C. Damiano

OBJECTIVES To describe rates of Medicaid-funded services provided by orthodontists in Iowa to children and adolescents, identify factors associated with utilization, and describe geographic barriers to care. METHODS We analyzed enrollment and claims data from the Iowa Medicaid program for a 3-year period, January 2008 through December 2010. Descriptive, bivariate, and multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed with utilization of orthodontic services as the main outcome variable. Service areas were identified by small area analysis in order to examine regional variability in utilization. RESULTS The overall rate of orthodontic utilization was 3.1 percent. Medicaid enrollees living in small towns and rural areas were more likely to utilize orthodontic services than those living in urban areas. Children who had an oral evaluation by a primary care provider in the year prior to the study period were more likely to receive orthodontic services. Service areas with lower population density and greater mean travel distance to participating orthodontists had higher utilization rates than smaller, more densely populated areas. CONCLUSIONS Rural residency and increased travel distances do not appear to act as barriers to orthodontic care for this population. The wide variability of utilization rates seen across service areas may be related to workforce supply in the form of orthodontists who accept Medicaid-insured patients. Referrals to orthodontists from primary care dentists may improve access to specialty care for Medicaid enrollees.


BMC Oral Health | 2014

Career influences among final year dental students who plan to enter private practice.

Benjamin M Nashleanas; Susan C. McKernan; Raymond A. Kuthy; Fang Qian

BackgroundExisting research about the influence of educational debt on students’ decision to enter general practice immediately after graduation is conflicting. Other potential factors that could affect this decision include the influence of a spouse or other family member, the importance of a mentoring dentist, and how students perceive the burden of their debt. The goal of this study was to examine the importance of debt on career decision-making while also considering the role of other influences.MethodsResponses to a self-completed questionnaire of all final (fourth) year students at the University of Iowa College of Dentistry from 2007 through 2010 were analyzed to identify the importance of educational debt and the influence of spouses, other family members, and mentoring dentists in the decision to enter private general practice immediately after graduation. Statistical analysis included bivariate tests (t-tests and Chi-square tests) and multivariable logistic regression.Results58.9% of respondents (N = 156) planned to immediately enter private practice after dental school. Bivariate analyses revealed women to be more likely to enter private practice than their male counterparts (69.0% vs. 51.8%, p = .006). Students planning to enter practice immediately did not differ significantly from those with other career plans on the basis of marital status or having a family member in dentistry. Anticipated educational debt of at least


Journal of Rural Health | 2013

General Dentist Characteristics Associated With Rural Practice Location

Susan C. McKernan; Raymond A. Kuthy; Golnaz Kavand

100,000 was positively associated with plans to enter private practice immediately after graduation. Self-reported importance of educational debt was not associated with career plans. However, the influence of a spouse, other family members, and family dentists were also positively associated with the decision to enter private practice. These factors all maintained significance in the final multivariable model (p < 0.05); however, educational debt of at least


Health & Place | 2015

Geographic variation of dental utilization among low income children.

Susan C. McKernan; Raymond A. Kuthy; Paul F. Hanley; Michael P. Jones; Elizabeth T. Momany; Michelle R. McQuistan; Peter C. Damiano

100,000 was the strongest predictor of plans to enter private practice (OR = 2.34; p = 0.023).ConclusionsSince the 1970s, increasing numbers of dentists in the U.S. have pursued specialty training after dental school. However, rising educational debts may counter this trend as increasing numbers of dentists choose to immediately pursue general dentistry at graduation. This project has demonstrated the significant influence of educational debt, beyond other external influences.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2016

Travel burden and dentist bypass among dentally insured children

Susan C. McKernan; Mark Pooley; Elizabeth T. Momany; Raymond A. Kuthy

PURPOSE To examine whether there is a difference in the likelihood that a general dentist practices in a rural location based on individual characteristics, including dental school attended, birth state, practice arrangement, sex, and age. METHODS All private practice, general dentists in Iowa were included in this study. Data were extracted from the year 2010 version of the Iowa Dentist Tracking System, which monitors practice patterns of active dentists. Rurality of primary office location, categorized using Rural-Urban Commuting Area codes, served as the outcome variable. Chi-square tests and multivariable logistic regression were used to explain associations between rural practice location and dentist characteristics. FINDINGS Fifteen percent of the states population resided in isolated small rural towns, but only 8% of general dentists practiced here. Approximately 17% of dentists in isolated small rural towns were age 40 or younger, compared to 32% of dentists in urban areas. Among male dentists, those who were born in Iowa (P = .002) were older (P = .020), and graduated from dental schools other than the University of Iowa (P = .009) were more likely to practice in rural areas than were their counterparts. Conversely, among female dentists, solo practice (P = .016) was the only variable significantly associated with rural practice location. CONCLUSIONS The dentist workforce in rural areas of Iowa is dominated by older males who were born in Iowa. As this generation retires and increasing numbers of women enter the profession, state policy makers and planners will need to monitor changing trends in the rural workforce.


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2018

Relationship between community-level variables and number of general dentists

Raymond A. Kuthy; Susan C. McKernan; Mark Pooley; M. Bridget Zimmerman

Spatial accessibility of dental care is mediated by dentist workforce availability and travel costs. In this study, we generated dental service areas through small area analysis of Medicaid administrative data and claims. Service areas were then used to assess dimensions of spatial accessibility, including dentist-to-population ratios, and examine relationships in geographic variation of routine dental care among Medicaid-enrolled children. Our findings indicate significant geographic differences in accessibility for Hispanic children compared to other children, even after controlling for individual and service area characteristics.


Journal of Public Health Dentistry | 2018

Evaluation of enrollee satisfaction with Iowa's Dental Wellness Plan for the Medicaid expansion population: Enrollee satisfaction with Iowa's Dental Wellness Plan

Julie C. Reynolds; Susan C. McKernan; Jennifer Sukalski; Peter C. Damiano

OBJECTIVES Using administrative data from Iowa Medicaid and a large private dental insurer, we compared distance to the nearest primary care dentist for children ages 6-15 in 2012. Additionally, we examined rates of provider bypass in both populations as an indicator of spatial accessibility to dental care. METHODS We calculated measures of travel burden, including distance to the nearest primary care dentist and distance to current primary care dentist. Distance outcomes and rates of bypass, traveling beyond the nearest dentist for care, were compared by insurance type. RESULTS We found that Medicaid-enrolled children lived farther from the nearest dentist and farther from their current dentist than privately insured children. However, rates of bypass were higher among the privately insured population. These results were consistent among urban and rural residents; additionally, both rural populations demonstrated greater travel distances than urban dwellers. CONCLUSIONS Travel burden was greater among Medicaid-enrolled children. Lower rates of bypass, in conjunction with lower rates of dental utilization in this population, may indicate a distance threshold beyond which dental care becomes unattainable.


Dental Clinics of North America | 2018

Dental Public Health Practice, Infrastructure, and Workforce in the United States

Astha Singhal; Susan C. McKernan; Woosung Sohn

BACKGROUND In this study, the authors used observational data from 2014 to evaluate the association between the number of general dentists and several community characteristics. METHODS The authors collected community-level characteristics from secondary sources for all 947 Iowa incorporated communities to study their relationships with the mean number of general dentists per 1,000 population per square mile (population density), the dependent variable. The authors used zero-inflated negative binomial models to examine the association between the dependent and predictor variables. RESULTS Only 22.8% of communities had a dentist. Urban, young, well-educated, fluoridated communities with at least 1 elementary school had the highest estimated mean concentration of dentists. Isolated communities with older, less educated adults and lacking fluoridation and an elementary school had the fewest dentists. CONCLUSIONS Although population is an important determinant for where a dentist practices, other variables such as urbanization, demographic characteristics, fluoridation status, and presence of at least 1 elementary school are also predictors of the number of dentists in a community. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS These findings provide dental students and young practitioners useful information by highlighting community characteristics that are associated with office locations.


Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2016

Public Dental Safety Net in Iowa: Capacity and Readiness for Health Care Reform

Julie C. Reynolds; Susan C. McKernan; Raymond A. Kuthy; Nancy B. Adrianse; Simi Mani; Peter C. Damiano

BACKGROUND Dental coverage for Iowas Medicaid expansion population is provided through the Dental Wellness Plan (DWP), implemented in May 2014. The plan targets healthy behavior incentives via an earned benefits structure, whereby additional services are covered if enrollees return every 6-12 months for routine dental visits. This study examines enrollee satisfaction with the DWP. METHODS We surveyed a random sample of DWP enrollees 1 year after program implementation about their experiences. Survey items covered dental plan satisfaction, self-rated measures of health, and knowledge and attitudes toward the earned benefits approach. RESULTS Dental plan satisfaction was rated as low by 38 percent of respondents (n = 416), moderate by 25 percent (n = 276), and high by 37 percent (n = 402). A majority of respondents (66 percent) did not know about the earned benefits structure. Regression analysis indicated that respondents most likely to have low plan satisfaction were those who felt it was difficult to earn benefits (OR 3.66, P < 0.001) and those who were unable to find (OR 3.17, P < 0.001), or did not try to find (OR 3.51, P < 0.001), a regular dentist in the plan. CONCLUSIONS Satisfaction with a new model of dental insurance was influenced by whether enrollees had a regular source of care and their perceived ability to return for regular checkups in order to earn covered benefits.


Journal of the American Dental Association | 2009

Dentist workforce trends in a primarily rural state: Iowa: 1997-2007.

Raymond A. Kuthy; Susan C. McKernan; Jed S. Hand; David Johnsen

Dental public health is a unique specialty of dentistry that focuses on prevention of oral diseases among populations rather than individual patients. It encompasses several complementary disciplines and greatly varies in its functions and activities. Several federal, state, local, and nonpublic entities operationalize the mission of dental public health to improve population oral health through a diverse and vibrant workforce.

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