🧭 Overview
Special Care Dentistry supports people whose oral health care is affected by:
- Physical disabilities
- Intellectual / learning disabilities
- Mental health conditions
- Medical conditions
- Social or communication difficulties
👉 The aim is to ensure equal, safe, and accessible dental care for everyone
⚠️ Why it matters
Special Care Dentistry is important because many people face extra challenges when trying to get dental care, such as:
🚧 Barriers to access
- Difficulty travelling to dental clinics
- Mobility needs (wheelchair access, hoists, etc.)
- Communication difficulties
- Anxiety or fear of dental treatment
- Sensory sensitivities (noise, lights, touch)
🦷 Higher risk of dental problems
- Higher rates of tooth decay (caries)
- Gum disease (periodontal disease)
- Difficulty maintaining daily oral hygiene
- Side effects from medications (dry mouth, etc.)
⚖️ Health inequality
Without support, some groups are more likely to:
- Miss dental appointments
- Receive delayed treatment
- Experience pain or untreated infections
💡 What Special Care Dentistry does
Special Care Dentists and teams may:
- Adapt treatment plans to individual needs
- Use longer or multiple appointments if needed
- Provide sedation or general anaesthetic when appropriate
- Offer home visits or hospital-based care
- Use communication aids (Easy Read, symbols, carers’ input)
- Work closely with families, carers, and support workers
🤝 Who is involved?
Care is often delivered by a team including:
- Dentists
- Dental nurses
- Hygienists
- Speech and communication specialists
- Care staff/support workers
- Family members or carers
🎯 Goal
👉 The main goal is simple:
Everyone should be able to get dental care safely, comfortably, and with dignity — no matter their needs.
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