Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services

Research investigating accessibility to dental care has changed 1 since the 1980s when Finch et al showed that dental anxiety, perception of need and costs acted as barriers to attendance. Since that time accessibility problems have been shown to lie not with the patient but with government and soci...

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Main Author: Ruth Freeman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Estadual de Campinas 2015-10-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8640966
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spelling doaj-ab6d01ca4ff54dcb9358ebd5253c7c572021-07-15T14:03:30ZengUniversidade Estadual de CampinasBrazilian Journal of Oral Sciences1677-32252015-10-011110.20396/bjos.v1i1.8640966Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental servicesRuth Freeman0Queen’s University of BelfastResearch investigating accessibility to dental care has changed 1 since the 1980s when Finch et al showed that dental anxiety, perception of need and costs acted as barriers to attendance. Since that time accessibility problems have been shown to lie not with the patient but with government and society as well as the dental profession. An understanding of the difficulties that exist for those, who society has delegated to its edges, together with the impoverishment of their social networks, provides government and health planners with the means to provide responsive dental services to all. This article presents the research findings associated with access to dental care. It describes how accessibility as a concept acquired a dynamic quality in the late 1980s. This argument continues by incorporating the concepts of social exclusion and social capital to illustrate how at the centre of access difficulties, is not the individual, but society. The need for government to appreciate that the physical structures and dental health care facilities together with the needs and the requirements of the planners, health professionals and people must be woven together to allow the formation of a cohesive structure which will form the basis of responsive and accessible health care for allhttps://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8640966Dental CareDental Service.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ruth Freeman
spellingShingle Ruth Freeman
Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
Dental Care
Dental Service.
author_facet Ruth Freeman
author_sort Ruth Freeman
title Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
title_short Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
title_full Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
title_fullStr Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
title_full_unstemmed Social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
title_sort social exclusion, barriers and accessing dental care: thoughts on planning responsive dental services
publisher Universidade Estadual de Campinas
series Brazilian Journal of Oral Sciences
issn 1677-3225
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Research investigating accessibility to dental care has changed 1 since the 1980s when Finch et al showed that dental anxiety, perception of need and costs acted as barriers to attendance. Since that time accessibility problems have been shown to lie not with the patient but with government and society as well as the dental profession. An understanding of the difficulties that exist for those, who society has delegated to its edges, together with the impoverishment of their social networks, provides government and health planners with the means to provide responsive dental services to all. This article presents the research findings associated with access to dental care. It describes how accessibility as a concept acquired a dynamic quality in the late 1980s. This argument continues by incorporating the concepts of social exclusion and social capital to illustrate how at the centre of access difficulties, is not the individual, but society. The need for government to appreciate that the physical structures and dental health care facilities together with the needs and the requirements of the planners, health professionals and people must be woven together to allow the formation of a cohesive structure which will form the basis of responsive and accessible health care for all
topic Dental Care
Dental Service.
url https://periodicos.sbu.unicamp.br/ojs/index.php/bjos/article/view/8640966
work_keys_str_mv AT ruthfreeman socialexclusionbarriersandaccessingdentalcarethoughtsonplanningresponsivedentalservices
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