Teaching Undergraduate Special Care Dentistry in the UK and Ireland: What? How? When? How Much? Who?

Caoimhin Mac Giolla Phadraig*, Claire Curtin, Richard Fitzgerald , Ellie Hedari, Lois Gall, Rebecca Wassall, Yvonne Haliwell , Claire Sims, Andrew Kwasnicki , Nicholas Beacher *

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

Abstract

Introduction:
New dental graduates are expected to have acquired the skills and behaviours to provide dental care for the population they serve. An ageing population and advances in medicine mean that there are increasing numbers of patients who may require Special Care Dentistry. Special Care Dentistry is the branch of dentistry concerned with access to equitable oral healthcare for people with disabilities and those who are disadvantaged. This study aimed to explore the teaching of Special Care Dentistry (SCD) within undergraduate (UG) dental curricula in the UK and Ireland.

Materials and Methods:
A cross-sectional online survey was distributed to all SCD teaching leads within 18 universities delivering undergraduate dental curricula in the UK and Ireland. Respondents described their curriculum, teaching and assessment, as well as the barriers and facilitators they faced. Qualitative responses were collected as open-ended text within the survey and coded independently by two authors.

Results:
From 12 respondents (67% response rate), the average time given to SCD during training over the whole UG programme was reportedly 47.4 h. While 83% (n = 10) reported that students observed treatment delivery for special care patients, only 50% (n = 6) reported actual student-delivered care. Almost all (n = 10) applied the International Association of Disability and Oral Health curriculum, as recognised by the Association of Dental Education Europe (ADEE). Attitudes towards SCD from academic staff outside of the specialty were seen as the biggest barrier to SCD teaching, whereas the availability of academic staff and emphasis on SCD within the curriculum were facilitators.

Discussion:
The teaching of SCD in dental schools in the UK and Ireland is markedly varied, with respondents highlighting barriers to the delivery of teaching and learning in this area.

Conclusions:
There is a persistent need to standardise undergraduate exposure to patients requiring Special Care Dentistry across Ireland and the UK. This will equip the future dental profession to adequately and equitably care for the whole of society, regardless of ability.
Original languageEnglish
Number of pages10
JournalEuropean Journal of Dental Education
Early online date26 Feb 2026
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 26 Feb 2026

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 The Author(s).

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