Rahila Ummer-Christian1, Teresa Iacono2, Nathan Grills3, Archana Pradhan4, Nicole Hughes3, Mark Gussy2. 1. La Trobe Rural Health School, La Trobe University, Edwards Road, Flora Hill, VIC 3550, Australia. Electronic address: r.christian@latrobe.edu. 2. La Trobe Rural Health School, La Trobe University, Edwards Road, Flora Hill, VIC 3550, Australia. 3. Nossal Institute of Global Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, VIC 3010, Australia. 4. School of Dentistry, The University of Queensland, 288 Herston Road, Corner Bramston Terrace and Herston Rd, Herston, QLD 4006, Australia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Children with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) face considerable challenges in participating in dental services. These challenges include resource constraints and inadequate skills of health service providers to work with this population. AIM: The aim was to scope published studies that addressed access to dental services for children with IDD in order to determine the extent to which various barriers have been researched, using an access framework derived from the literature. Access was defined to include the six dimensions of accessibility, availability, affordability, accommodation, acceptability, and appropriateness. METHOD: Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review framework was used. Relevant databases (e.g., Medline) were searched for all empirical studies conducted from January 2000 to February 2017 that met inclusion criteria. Data were extracted along the six dimensions of the access framework. RESULTS: Sixteen international studies were identified which indicated common key barriers to dental service use: the difficulties of physical inaccessibility, lack of access to information among carers, lack of knowledge of disability issues, and low experience and skills in caring for children with IDD among dental practitioners. CONCLUSIONS: Key recommendations made were exploring dental practitioners' understanding of disability legislation and developing training for practitioners to expand on issues specific to IDD.
BACKGROUND:Children with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities (IDD) face considerable challenges in participating in dental services. These challenges include resource constraints and inadequate skills of health service providers to work with this population. AIM: The aim was to scope published studies that addressed access to dental services for children with IDD in order to determine the extent to which various barriers have been researched, using an access framework derived from the literature. Access was defined to include the six dimensions of accessibility, availability, affordability, accommodation, acceptability, and appropriateness. METHOD: Arksey and O'Malley's scoping review framework was used. Relevant databases (e.g., Medline) were searched for all empirical studies conducted from January 2000 to February 2017 that met inclusion criteria. Data were extracted along the six dimensions of the access framework. RESULTS: Sixteen international studies were identified which indicated common key barriers to dental service use: the difficulties of physical inaccessibility, lack of access to information among carers, lack of knowledge of disability issues, and low experience and skills in caring for children with IDD among dental practitioners. CONCLUSIONS: Key recommendations made were exploring dental practitioners' understanding of disability legislation and developing training for practitioners to expand on issues specific to IDD.
Authors: Dagmar Schnabl; Michael Oberhofer; Fabian Barbieri; Johannes Laimer; René Steiner; Emanuel Bruckmoser; Ingrid Grunert Journal: Healthcare (Basel) Date: 2021-03-04