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Dental-van-exterior

Driving dental care into the neighborhood

FEATURED | September 11, 2019
STORY BY: EDITORIAL STAFF

黑料吃瓜网鈥檚 School of Dental Medicine launches new partnership with Hough Heritage to bring oral health care to seniors

The "Lifelong Smiles" van is adding a new stop on its tour to deliver high-quality, discounted dental care to Cleveland-area seniors.

The geriatric dental van is part of an initiative at the 黑料吃瓜网 School of Dental Medicine to train dental students to treat older patients and, at the same time, offer needed services to residents of nursing and assisted-living facilities.

The dental school鈥檚 newest partnership with , a low-income housing facility for seniors, was made official on Aug. 6 with the van鈥檚 first visit. About a dozen patients walked out the front door of their homes, adjacent to the new dental school, and into the 38-foot-long mobile dental operatory.

dentist works on a patient
Suparna Mahalaha, an assistant professor at the dental school and the director of the Lifelong Smiles program, works on a patient in the Lifelong Smiles geriatric care van.

鈥淪ome seniors find it difficult to visit the dentist,鈥 said Suparna Mahalaha, an assistant professor at the dental school and the program鈥檚 director. 鈥淭he best part is that these seniors have more access to care. Of course, patients can always come to the dental school for treatment, but if you鈥檙e older and have a difficult time getting around, wouldn鈥檛 it be nice to have the dentist pull up to your building?鈥

That鈥檚 the case for retiree and military veteran Amos Renix, a resident in Hough Heritage. Renix, like many of Lifelong Smiles patients, falls through the cracks in insurance coverage鈥攏ot enough from the Veterans Affairs and none at all from Medicare.

鈥淚nsurance has been a problem for me,鈥 Renix said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been quite a while since I鈥檝e been to the dentist. And I haven鈥檛 had this much dental care since I was a child.鈥

The program fits in with the dental school鈥檚 goal of helping to meet the needs of an aging population, Mahalaha said. The nation's senior population鈥攁ges 65 and older鈥攊s expected to surpass 72 million by 2030, according to federal estimates. That's more than double the number from 2000.

Care that keeps rolling on

The vehicle itself resembles an RV that鈥檚 been converted into a high-tech dental office on wheels鈥攆eaturing fully functioning dental chair stations, office space, digital X-rays and a wheelchair lift鈥攚ith the capacity to treat two patients at a time.

The Lifelong Smiles initiative began in 2015. The McGregor Foundation has helped fund the program since its inception, dedicating more than $200,000 to the van. The new partnership with Hough Heritage adds to the initiative鈥檚 other Cleveland-area affiliations with the , and

Mahalaha and Lisa Blackmon, a visiting assistant professor at the dental school, oversee the third- and fourth-year students, who have a clinical geriatric rotation in which they provide dental care, assess patients and discuss overall treatment plans with students of medicine, nursing, pharmacy and social work.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important for the students to have and see others鈥 interactions with these patients,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hese seniors are so appreciative. What we offer them, they give back to us ten-fold. It鈥檚 one thing to be clinically excellent. It鈥檚 another thing to be compassionate.鈥


For more information, contact Colin McEwen at colin.mcewen@case.edu.