Abstract
A sample of 220 adults accompanying children to Community Dental Service (CDS) clinics in two adjacent health districts in the North Western Health Region of England were questioned to gain insight into their views about the service. Seventy-five per cent reported that they had a dentist of their own; 82% of these claimed to have visited him/her in the previous 12 months. They had chosen the CDS for four broad reasons: 51% saw it as providing a specialised service, 27% came as a result of a school inspection, 15% used it because it was convenient, and 7% had been unhappy with the care provided by a general dental practitioner. Seventy-six per cent thought that the CDS should be allowed to treat adults. There were no significant differences between those with dentists of their own and those without, or between those who gave the specialised nature of the CDS as the reason for attending and those who did not. Those who came by car were significantly less likely to believe that the CDS should treat adults; nevertheless, 69% of these were in favour
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Whittle, J., Kelly, B. Some parental views on the Community Dental Service. Br Dent J 168, 64–66 (1990). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bdj.4807084
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bdj.4807084