Concerns around dental care access after U Sask moves clinic out of Saskatoon's core
CBC
The University of Saskatchewan has cited safety concerns in its decision to move its dental clinic from the city's core to its main clinic on campus — a move the executive director of the Saskatoon Community Clinic says raises concerns about access.
"Children that live in the core neighborhood of Saskatoon … where the dental clinic was located, actually have a much higher rate of cavities than children living elsewhere in Saskatoon or in the province," said Lisa Clatney.
"There were significant challenges in providing equitable dental care to that population and now it's going to be even more difficult for them to receive the care."
University of Saskatchewan dental students had worked under the supervision of dentists at its Saskatoon West Clinic, in the Westside Saskatoon Community Clinic on 20th Street for 12 years prior to the move in late October.
The move out of the inner-city Pleasant Hill neighbourhood also affected operations of DIRECT Dental, a student-run, volunteer-based initiative that provided free emergency treatment out of the clinic on Saturdays during the school year for those who couldn't afford it.
Members of that initiative said in a social media post after the relocation announcement that they were "exploring all possible alternatives" to ensure the service could run in the future.
But Clatney fears that some former patients will no longer seek dental care because there is no longer an option in the neighbourhood.
There are concerns about how former patients will get to the University of Saskatchewan campus, whether they will feel comfortable going there for dental care, and how appointments will be booked, she said.
"It worked for them to be able to come to the Westside Community Clinic — they were familiar [with it]," Clatney said.
"That's where they were coming to receive all their primary health-care needs and at the same time, they could also have their dental needs met."
Jaris Swidrovich, a former board member of the Saskatoon Community Clinic who owns property in Saskatoon's core neighbourhood, said the majority of Westside Community Clinic patients are Indigenous.
The clinic incorporated ceremonies such as smudging into its practices to help patients feel more comfortable accessing care there, he said.
But in moving the Saskatoon West Clinic, the university's college of dentistry is failing in its own stated strategic priorities, which include becoming "Canada's leader in inclusive community care" and "uplifting the needs, preferences and aspirations of Indigenous people," said Swidrovich.
"It makes folks like myself, who are well integrated in the Indigenous community, question the [college's] commitment to Indigenous peoples," said Swidrovich, who is a member of the Yellow Quill First Nation.