Dentistry students bring smiles to patients with special needs
Not every smile is treated equally, says Ali Sigal, a graduate student at the University of Toronto specializing in paediatric dentistry: people with special needs are routinely underserved by oral health professionals.
As part of their Doctor of Dental Surgery program, 福利姬自慰students perform a rotation in the Mount Sinai Clinic, which caters to patients with special needs. But research Sigal conducted in this clinic in 2006 underscores a problem that stretches across North America and beyond.
鈥淲hen you ask these families, 鈥楬ave you tried seeing a dentist in your community?鈥 Nine times out of ten they say, 鈥榃e went to five, we went to eight, before coming here,鈥欌 says Sigal.
The wait list at the Mount Sinai Clinic provides another clue: 鈥淭he wait list just to be seen is a year long. Some patients and their caregivers travel up to eight hours to Toronto for a fifteen-minute check-up,鈥 says Sigal. 鈥淭his can鈥檛 happen.鈥
Sigal founded the national non-profit organization, Oral Health, Total Health, and its Sharing Smiles Day event, in response.
Now in its seventh year, the full-day event brings together practising dental professionals, dental students and people with various mental and physical disabilities. The goal: to break down barriers and help dental professionals do more for an underserved patient population.
鈥淧atients with special needs deserve the same opportunity to optimize their oral health as does anyone. Sharing Smiles Day helps to heighten awareness that we can do more,鈥 says Daniel Haas, dean of the Faculty of Dentistry.
With carnival games, musical performances and dental hygiene lessons for those with special needs, student volunteers from U of T鈥檚 Faculty of Dentistry, under the guidance of volunteer mentors, learn that this vulnerable segment of society doesn鈥檛 necessarily need to be cared for in a specialized environment or involve specialized care.
鈥淲e want to break down attitudinal barriers in training hygienists and dentists,鈥 says student Alicia Clancy, one of the organizers of this year鈥檚 event taking place at Oakville鈥檚 Le Dome on Saturday, February 8th.
鈥淧roviding an opportunity for patients and providers to meet and to get to know each other is a great first step in ensuring that patients with special needs receive the care they need,鈥 says Dr. Carlos Qui帽onez, program director of dental public health at the Faculty.
Meanwhile, Oral Health, Total Health has been expanding.
鈥淲e now have eleven chapters across Canada,鈥 Sigal said, citing the passion and commitment of its many volunteer organizers.
Oral Health, Total Health鈥檚 () Sharing Smiles Day 2015, sponsored by Manulife Financial, begins Sunday, February 8th at 10:00 a.m. at Le Dome, located at 1173 North Service Rd. East, Oakville, ON L6H 1A7.