Special needs dentistry

Special Needs Dentistry 2024 events and conferences

It’s important not to underestimate the difference a smile can make. We can all build a more inclusive society, one smile and one conversation at a time.

To oral healthcare professionals interested in learning more about Special Needs Dentistry, given it is January, when many people are planning out the conferences and events they will be attending, I collated a list of 2024 Special Needs Dentistry events, national and international, to support you in integrating them into your professional development this year. These are the ones to my knowledge, please feel free to let me know if there are any others I have missed and I will add them on. If you have subscribed to my email list you will have received this information in your inbox. If you are interested in receiving future email updates about Special Needs Dentistry and my mindset-somatic coaching offerings you can sign up here!

ADOHTA are holding a SA-NT CPD Dinner on Special Needs Dentistry: 

Date: 16th February 2024. Location: Adelaide 

ADAWA are holding a CPD event on treating people with disability (so pleased to see them use my preferred term “diverse-abilities!”) 

Date: 20th July 2024 . Location: Western Australia 

International Association of Disability and Oral Health 27th iADH Scientific Conference is in Seoul this year.

Date: 26th September 2024. Location: Seoul, South Korea  

Special Care in Dentistry Association (SCDA) is hosting a virtual summit and a conference: 

Date: September 26-28th. Location: Orlando 

The Virtual Summit is on April 20th 2024 

For those of you who aren’t in a position to fit in an overseas trip in September, The Royal Australasian College of Dental Surgeons The Fine Edge of Dentistry 2024 conference in Cairns this year is featuring a number of Special Needs Dentistry related topics on medically-compromised patient management including a series of three lectures by the keynote international speaker A/Prof Nathaniel Treister on oral complications in cancer patients, a masterclass on acute and chronic management by Dr Amanda Phoon Nguyen, Dr Michael Burgess and Dr Leanne Teoh, a presentation by Dr Sharonne Zaks on Working with patients impacted by Family Violence and Sexual Assault, and an update on the growing list of drugs causing MRONJ by registered pharmacist and dentist, Dr Leanne Teoh.

I’m also excited to be presenting a mindset and psychosomatic practice-based masterclass on Juggling the Priorities. It is great to see more conferences featuring non-clinical topics in their programs to support the wellbeing of clinicians.  Hope to see you there, and if we haven’t met before please do come up to say hi 🙂

Advocacy: Provision and access to dental services in Australia

It was an honour and privilege to speak with the Federal Minister for Health and Aged Care, the Honourable Mark Butler MP, regarding the final report from the Select Committee into the Provision of and Access to Dental Services in Australia. There were numerous recommendations in the report related to the needs of the patients of whom I and my fellow Specialists in Special Needs Dentistry provide care for, including oral healthcare for people with Head and Neck cancer, the oral health recommendations from the Royal Commission into Aged Care, access to sedation for people with disability, and addressing workforce shortages including initiatives for upskilling and training of the dental profession to care for people with disabilities and complex needs. This represents the combined efforts of many different advocates, clinicians, patients, and their families – thank you to everyone who highlighed the ongoing importance of access to oral healthcare for marginalised groups in our community, especially for those who may not be in a position to speak up for themselves. Thank you to Minister Bulter, Nick Martin, and Rob Dabrowski for recognising the importance of this conversation, with access to oral healthcare affecting not only a person’s quality of life, but also, the length of a person’s life -especially for our elderly, people with intellectual disability and people with swallowing difficulties, who can die prematurely through a lung disease caused by inhalation of dental plaque #brushingteethsaveslives #oralhealthadvocacy #specialneedsdentistry

Dr Trudy Lin Special Needs Dental Clinic Video Tour

As one of very few Specialists in Special Needs Dentistry based in South Australia, I worked at the Special Needs Unit of the Adelaide Dental Hospital for 7 years, and in 2023 made a transition to providing mobile dental services to people in their homes and residential facilities; as well as, practicing at an accessibility-friendly private clinic in Mile End which includes access to nitrous oxide/happy gas. Excited to share this video of the new clinic location, we created this for our patients and families to familiarise before their visit – enjoy!

Dr Trudy Lin Special Needs Dental Clinic Tour – YouTube

#specialneedsdentistry#accessibilityforall#dentalclinic#oralhealthmatters‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍‍

Improving access to Oral healthcare for people with disability

Reflecting upon 2023, one of the significant milestones of this year was publishing results from the research thesis I undertook during my specialist training in Special Needs Dentistry, which compared and assessed two case mix tools developed by the British Dental Association in stratification and triaging of patients in the Australian context. I was humbled to present the findings at the International Association for Disability and Oral Health conference in Paris, alongside specialists in Special Needs Dentistry from all over the world who investigated various assessment tools in their own respective countries. 

This sharing of knowledge highlighted the exciting prospects for collaboration and innovation in addressing the common challenges faced by individuals with disabilities in different countries. My sincere hope is that this published data can contribute to improving access to oral healthcare for people with disabilities, both in Australia and worldwide. To read more: Comparing the BDA case mix tool and simplified case mix tool for stratification of public dental patients with disabilities in South Australia – PubMed (nih.gov)

My lived experience with invisible disability

I delivered the keynote on “Breaking the Bias” for the Rotary International Women’s Day Breakfast 2022. I spoke about breaking unconscious biases related to people with disabilities. What comes to mind when you think of the word ‘disability’? Is it someone in a wheelchair?

These images come to mind because they are easily visible and often what’s portrayed in the media. In reality, 90% of 4.4 million people with disabilities in Australia are living with an invisible disability. It’s crucial for there to be more diverse representations of people with disability that don’t reduce them down to a stereotype.

A way we can combat these stereotypes and unconscious biases is through speaking up to bring visibility to invisible disabilities, which improves awareness of disability as shared universal human experience likely to affect each one of us at some point in our lives.

Today, I share my experience with invisible disability over the last 12 months to raise awareness and help reduce the stigma around invisible disability, and with the hope that anyone who relates to these experiences can feel more seen and less alone.

In March 2022, I was working full time as a clinician in Special Needs Dentistry, as well as an ultramarathon runner, rock climber, aerialist, and in the middle of training for an Ironman triathlon.


In April 2022, I became unwell with COVID and experienced severe nasal and respiratory symptoms which persisted for several months, along with joint pain, fatigue, brain fog, sinus and chest pain, palpitations, and shortness of breath. I went from a young, fit, and healthy person to being diagnosed with three medical conditions: long COVID, asthma, and vocal cord dysfunction.


It was confronting to go from being a person who had the physical capability to run an 105km ultramarathon, to then struggling to breathe while vacuuming, but the most devastating and difficult part to come to terms with, was losing the ability to look after my patients. Not accepting my new physical limitations, I persisted in trying to get back to work before I had recovered, and in the middle of attempting multiple extractions while wearing a P2 mask, I pushed myself too far and it resulted in a trip from the clinic to the emergency department.


Then followed many months of regular appointments with various health professionals: my GP, respiratory specialist, ENT specialist, cardiologist, speech pathologist, pulmonary rehabilitation team and respiratory physiotherapist, alongside wrestling with the uncertainty of long COVID being a relatively unknown condition and with only experimental treatment options available.


All three conditions are not apparent when you look at me. This invisibility, has its advantages and disadvantages.


A significant disadvantage of invisible disability is that sometimes people don’t believe you when you tell them about the hidden symptoms you experience. Over many years caring for my patients with non-visible disabilities, I heard them share stories of the judgement they received from others – from being accused of faking their symptoms or exaggerating their severity and resulting in them having to constantly justify and prove their existence. I experienced this same stigma with my conditions, including from colleagues and people who had COVID and assumed my symptoms couldn’t be that bad because they had recovered from it.


My non-visible disability became visible through a Holter Monitor for 24 hours, to review my cardiac abnormalities. The fact that it was tangible and visible, helped legitimise my symptoms to others who may have doubted the severity of my illness. But it also came with strange stares in public, unwanted attention to my illness and questions directed towards it at times when I didn’t feel prepared to share about it. This is an advantage of the invisibility, the advantage of secrecy, and the choice to select who you disclose your invisible symptoms to and in your own time.


I am grateful for having been through this journey, as tough as it was, because of what it has taught me. I now have more personal understanding of the daily challenges my patients who have chronic conditions are faced with and can bring this understanding to deliver better care for my patients.


It also allowed me to practice the power of acceptance. Initially, I had been trying everything in my power to get back to my pre-COVID level of function, which included being full time in the clinic, and eventually it became apparent that I was resisting the reality of the chronic limiting nature of my medical conditions. The non-acceptance of this reality layered on additional self-created suffering, through wishing things were different from what they were. Once I accepted the physical limitations for what they were, it opened me up the other avenues I could contribute to my patients and my profession outside of my role as a clinician, and has created space for engaging in broader scale oral health advocacy, re-engaging with my passion for mentoring and coaching to support others in my profession – all of which align with my mission to create a more inclusive society where every person can access oral healthcare, to eat, speak, smile freely, and reach their full potential.


It has been almost 12 months integrating these conditions into my life, and I have reached a place in my recovery where the symptoms are less severe, more stable and I have proactive strategies to get back to doing the things I love, and though it looks different to how my life was before, I fully embrace and accept that. While I may not be back to pre COVID levels of Ironman training, I’m back to the swimming pool and having fun celebrating reaching each new milestone, as opposed to comparing to what I used to be able to do before.


It has taken a while to feel comfortable to share my experience publicly – especially after experiencing judgement from people who were made aware of my invisible conditions through most of my journey. But, when I came off the waiting list and attended my first appointment at the long-COVID clinic, the physician shared the stories of his other patients, other young, fit and healthy adults whose lives turned upside down from long COVID and were experiencing the same symptoms I was, and it helped me to feel less alone in my struggle. I finally felt seen and heard, and so I hope my sharing of my story can help someone else in the same way it helped me.


People with invisible disability face a different type of stigma to those with visible ones. When people are accused of faking their symptoms, or when people minimise or invalidate their experience, it can stop them from talking about their disability or cause them to downplay their experiences – which perpetuates the invisibility and stigma even more. Each one of us can contribute to breaking this stigma through responding with compassion and without judgement when a person with an invisible disability choose to share their experience, or through stepping out in courage and sharing your own experience of invisible disability. Together, we can build a more understanding and more inclusion in our society, one story of lived experience at a time.

Autism and neurodiversity advocacy

Drawing upon the lived experience of my youngest brother Arron who has autism, and the autistic people I have cared for as a Specialist in Special Needs Dentistry, I met with Emily Bourke – Labor MLC, our nation’s first Assistant Minister for Autism to discuss the oral healthcare needs of people with autism and the barriers they face to accessing care, which impacts on their general health, wellbeing, and flows on to limit their opportunities to access education, employment and live life to their true potential. I heard concerns about the negative impact of poor oral health and the barriers to accessing dental care echoed this week at the Autism Community Forum. Thank you to all of the people who stepped out in courage and shared their lived experiences that night. I encourage all individuals and caregivers with lived experience with autism to share and bring visibility to the issues which are important to you through emailing a few sentences, a video or audio clip to SAAutismStrategy@sa.gov.au by February 20th 2023.

Let’s amplify the voices of those with lived experience in shaping South Australia’s First Autism Strategy and be a part of building a community which is more inclusive of neurodiversity

#inclusion #neurodiversity #specialneedsdentistry #advocacy #oralhealthcare

Truly inclusive oral healthcare

Every person deserves access to oral healthcare, but there are barriers which exclude many people from attending a clinic or a hospital. This includes people with physical disability or mobility challenges due to chronic pain, people with autism who have sensory sensitivities, people who find it difficult to leave their homes due to agoraphobia, anxiety or multiple severe allergies. Aligning with my passion for inclusion and reaching those who face the most barriers to accessing care, it has been an incredible first week partnering with Respect Dental’s mobile dental service and creating access to specialist oral healthcare services for people who otherwise would not be able to receive it, in the comfort of their own homes and living facilities.

I am looking forward to contributing to this truly inclusive service in our shared mission of creating more equitable oral health outcomes for every person, regardless of their age, race, gender, medical status and whether or not they have a disability, as every person deserves the right to eat, speak and smile freely.

#oralhealthcare #specialneedsdentistry #mobiledentalservices #equityandinclusion #patientcentredcare

ABC Adelaide oral health tips

Thank you to ABC Adelaide and Emma Pedler for the opportunity to share practical strategies on how to look after you and your loved one’s oral health over the festive season!

You can listen from this link, starts at 1 hour 31 minutes: https://www.abc.net.au/adel…/programs/drive/drive/14122200

Emma asked what my wish was for 2023, my answer was for as many people as possible to spread the message that “Brushing teeth saves lives” to help prevent oral health from being a barrier to people living the full length of their life and their full quality of life through being able to eat, speak and smile! The life that every person has the right to live.

#specialneedsdentistry #oralhealthadvocacy

The right to smile

David Washington and I first started our conversations about inclusion and oral healthcare in a Q&A with over 700 people at the Australian of the Year Luncheon. Last week, we continued the conversation in studio, with a deep dive into oral health inequities, my views on disability as a social construct as opposed to a medicalised model, solutions I have been advocating for throughout this year with reflections on its impact, and a sneak preview into initiatives I will be working on in future.

Thank you David for the opportunity for these important messages to reach more listeners through the @indaily podcast: https://omny.fm/shows/notes-on-adelaide/the-right-to-smile

#specialneedsdentistry #oralhealthadvocacy #inclusionadvocacy #ausoftheyear

Camp quality service medallion

So delighted to receive this volunteer service medallion from Camp Quality and support their mission to improve the quality of life for children living with cancer and their families.

Drawing upon the experiences of my family members with cancer and my patients with head and neck cancer, I’ve seen how support and connection is a critical part of determining cancer treatment outcomes, and this is now confirmed by studies which show social support affects the prognosis, survival and quality of life for people with cancer and other chronic diseases. So an integral part of caring for my patients involves  connecting them with support services, and it was through facilitating these connections that I discovered Camp Quality. What I loved about their programs was they support not only the children, but also the siblings and parents – recognising that cancer doesn’t just impact the individual, it impacts the families and those that support them.

Wanting to help my patients beyond my role as a dentist, over the last 5 years I’ve volunteered for their camps and events, and have seen the healing power created through shared experience and fostering hope and optimism. I am grateful to be a part of the important contributions of Camp Quality and look forward to serving for many years to come!

#campquality #volunteering #specialneedsdentistry #headandneckcancer#cancersupport