4.3 Article

The Journey of Humanizing Care for People With Disabilities

Journal

QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 1199-1208

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/10497323211000334

Keywords

special health care needs; families; caregivers; dentists; developmental disability; cerebral palsy; intellectual disability (children and adults); down syndrome; autism; qualitative content analysis

Funding

  1. Special Care Dentistry Association

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The keynote address by Max Bramer at the SCDA conference highlighted the importance of humanizing care for all individuals, with a focus on those who are disabled. By examining the typologies of care and considering exemplars, dentistry can continue to improve training, tailor care, and advocate for equity in healthcare for people with disabilities.
The Max Bramer keynote address at the annual Special Care Dentistry Association (SCDA) conference provided an opportunity for reflection on our journey as health care professionals to humanize care for all people, and particularly those who are disabled. It is important to review the history of disability and discrimination to understand the progress made to date, and then consider the array of steps possible in further refining the humanistic dimensions of dental care. The typologies of tourist, traveler, adventurer, and scout were formulated to consider varieties of humanized care found within articles published in Special Care in Dentistry. Considering exemplars for each of these four typologies leads to reflections about how dentistry can embrace understanding, improve training of new dental professionals, tailor care for people with disabilities, and advocate for equity.

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