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Special
Needs Program
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| Dental care for people with a wide variety of medical,
developmental, and psychological disabilities and needs.
Special Needs
The University of the Pacific's Special Needs Program provides dental
care for patients with a wide variety of special needs including those individuals with
significant medical problems, developmental disabilities, psychiatric disorders, people
who are highly anxious about dental care, and elderly individuals.
Patients can receive dental care who have special needs that include but
are not limited to: developmental disabilities such as mental retardation, cerebral palsy,
epilepsy, and autism; heart disease; pulmonary (lung) problems; liver and kidney diseases;
neurological problems including multiple sclerosis and muscular dystrophy; organ
transplantation; cancer; blood problems; immune diseases including HIV disease;
Alzheimer's disease and other conditions affecting elderly individuals; dental phobia,
fear, and anxiety about dental treatment; and many other conditions that can affect an
individuals ability to receive dental care.
Dental Treatment Option
Dental treatment for individuals with the conditions described above can
be provided in the school's Advanced General Dentistry Clinic. Treatment options are
developed and treatment provided in a way that considers the specific abilities and needs
of each individual patient. The school's clinics are wheel chair accessible. Treatment can
be provided with using special medications including sedative medication. Dental treatment
can also be provided in a hospital setting for those individuals with more complex
situations. Hospital dentistry procedures are performed by coordinating the efforts of the
patient's physician, dental faculty and residents from the school, and social workers and
other personnel at local hospitals.
Please see Advanced
General Dentistry Clinic for Hours of Operation, Location
and How to Become a Patient.
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