Gum Disease, Silos, and the $1.3T Healthcare Cost We’re Ignoring
Periodontal disease intersects with more than $1.3 trillion in annual U.S. healthcare spending — spanning diabetes management, cardiovascular disease, dementia, and preterm labor — yet remains largely absent from most chronic disease management programs. Writing from the Convergent Leadership program at Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Mariya Filipova frames this as a silo problem rather than a spending problem. Bringing together clinicians, executives, and builders to examine where organizational fragmentation costs patients quality of care and healthy years of life, the session challenges healthcare leaders to identify where oral health integration could meaningfully improve outcomes across their patient populations.
For dental operators and integrated healthcare leaders, oral-systemic health represents both a clinical imperative and a growth opportunity. Organizations that bridge the care gap between dental and medical — embedding oral health into chronic disease protocols — can differentiate on outcomes, deepen patient relationships, and reduce downstream system costs.
While we aim to share useful and relevant resources, we do not guarantee the accuracy of content on this site or any external links. Views and opinions expressed in referenced content do not necessarily reflect those of Healthcare Growth Strategies.
