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Health Canada clarifies eligibility for seniors under national dental care plan

The federal government has posted updated information online on who is eligible for Canada's national dental care plan.

The additional details come after seniors raised concerns about whether their existing private dental insurance plans disqualified them from the public plan.

A spokesperson for Health Canada told CBC News that people who purchased private dental insurance plans on their own will qualify for the national program — but only after their existing private policies are no longer in effect.

Those with access to private dental coverage through their work or professional organizations remain ineligible for the Canadian Dental Care Plan. They're ineligible even if they decided to opt out of their private insurance, haven't made a claim, or have to pay a premium, the website says.

Ottawa has now added an exception for retirees who decided not to sign up for private dental insurance offered through their pension plans. If they opted out of those dental plans before Dec. 11, 2023, and aren't allowed to opt back in, they qualify for the national program.

A spokesperson for Health Canada told CBC News its website was updated Monday.

Health Minister Mark Holland said his department looked at situations where retirees had chosen to opt out of their pension dental plans before the national program was announced.

"[That] put a few people in limbo, where there was a question mark about whether or not they were going to get their coverage. We've said no, that's fair. That person should be able to get the coverage," Holland said Tuesday during a funding announcement in Iqaluit.

1 million Canadians signed up so far

The $13 billion Canadian Dental Care Plan is expected eventually to cover an estimated nine million low and middle

Read more on cbc.ca