DoD Tracks Military Dental Health via Civilian Providers
Published Date: 3/26/2026
Notice
Summary
The Department of Defense wants to keep collecting dental health info from active and reserve military members using a form filled out by civilian dentists. About 150,000 people will respond up to 5 times a year, spending just 3 minutes each time. Comments on this plan are open until April 27, 2026, and it won’t cost anyone extra—it’s all about keeping our troops healthy and ready!
Analyzed Economic Effects
2 provisions identified: 1 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
Military Dental Status Tracking
The Department of Defense will collect and record dental health information for active duty and reserve members using DD Form 2813 (OMB Control Number 0720-0022). This tracking is required by DoD policy to monitor the dental status of service members; comments on the information collection are due April 27, 2026.
Paperwork Burden on Dentists/Practices
Up to 150,000 respondents (including civilian dentists or dental practices) will fill out DD Form 2813 up to 5 times per respondent, for 750,000 annual responses. Each response averages 3 minutes (totaling 37,500 annual burden hours); responding is voluntary and the DoD has submitted the collection for OMB review with comments due April 27, 2026.
Your PRIA Score
Personalized for You
How does this regulation affect your finances?
Sign up for a PRIA Policy Scan to see your personalized alignment score for this federal register document and every other regulation we track. We analyze your financial profile against policy provisions to show you exactly what matters to your wallet.
Key Dates
Related Federal Register Documents
2026-09067 — Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement: Mitigating Risks Related to Foreign Ownership, Control, or Influence (DFARS Case 2021-D011)
The Department of Defense is updating rules to make sure companies working with them reveal if they’re owned or controlled by foreign folks. This helps keep our defense projects safe from hidden foreign influence. If you’re a contractor or subcontractor, get ready to share ownership info by July 6, 2026, or risk delays in your contracts.
2026-09038 — Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement: Disclosure of Greenhouse Gas Emissions (DFARS Case 2024-D021)
Starting May 7, 2026, the Department of Defense won’t make most new defense contractors share their greenhouse gas emissions unless it’s really needed for the contract. This change helps nontraditional contractors avoid extra paperwork, but DoD can still ask for info if it’s directly tied to the job. It’s a smart move to keep things fair and focused without slowing down important defense work.
2025-20402 — Updated Definition of “Waters of the United States”
The EPA and Army Corps are updating the rules that decide which waters are protected under the Clean Water Act, following a 2023 Supreme Court decision. This change helps everyone know exactly which waters are covered, making it easier to protect lakes, rivers, and wetlands while respecting state and tribal rights. People and businesses affected should share their thoughts by January 5, 2026, as this update could impact water projects and environmental protections.
2026-10288 — Information Collection; Architect-Engineer Qualifications (SF-330)
The government wants to keep using the Architect-Engineer Qualifications form (SF-330) for three more years to help pick the best design pros for federal projects. They’re asking architects, engineers, and the public to share thoughts by July 21, 2026, to make sure the form is useful and not too much work. No big cost changes, just a smooth extension to keep things running well.
2026-10289 — Information Collection; Privacy Training
The government agencies OFPP, DoD, GSA, and NASA want to keep their privacy training info collection going for three more years, past October 31, 2026. This affects federal contractors and employees who handle government acquisitions, making sure everyone stays sharp on privacy rules. They’re asking for your thoughts by July 21, 2026, to keep the process smooth and easy without extra costs or hassle.
2026-10287 — Information Collection; Certain Federal Acquisition Regulation Part 28 Requirements
The government agencies in charge of buying stuff—like the Department of Defense and NASA—are asking for your thoughts on keeping some paperwork rules for three more years. These rules help make sure buying processes are clear and fair, but they want to know if the paperwork is worth the effort or if it can be easier. If you’re involved in government contracts, this could affect how you report info until 2027.
Previous / Next Documents
Previous: 2026-05839 — Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request
The Department of Defense wants to keep using its GlobalNET system, which helps students, teachers, and experts connect and share info. About 6,000 people will spend just 5 minutes each to provide info, and the DoD is asking for your thoughts by April 27, 2026. This is a simple, voluntary update with no big costs or hassles.
Next: 2026-05841 — Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request
The Department of Defense is updating its paperwork for the SMART Scholarship Program, which helps students studying science and tech get scholarships and jobs with the DoD. About 4,000 people will fill out forms, and the DoD wants your comments by April 27, 2026. This update keeps the program running smoothly without costing extra money or time beyond what’s needed.