Final Reflection

Congratulations girls we did it, the end is finally here and we survived! :)

The past two years of my life have been focused on the learning of dental hygiene as a skill and as a profession, I have learned so many things, but of all of them the valuable lessons about client care and individualized care plans was learned in this unique populations class in my final semester of school.

The first thing we got to do in this course was to create a fun interactive presentation for the local grade eight students. We worked as a group and developed teamwork skills as well as very valuable leadership skills. When the day came for the actual presentation it was fun watching the student try their hand at new skills and even better when you got to watch the light turn on for a couple of them. The assignment was a great introduction to what this course would entail.

The next assignment was to go to the Innisdale high school and meet with a student who had learning or physical disabilities and deliver oral hygiene to that student. In preparation for this we had a class activity where we bound our limbs, covered our eyes, and plugged our ears to get a taste of what these people might live with on a daily basis. It was an enormously eye opening experience that no amount of notes could have captured. It was hands on and real. When we went to the high school I was incredibly nervous, but after meeting with my paired student and talking with her it was easy. This experience was valuable in that even though we might not see an individual with special needs on a daily basis in private practice it is certianly a demographic that we will see and treat and this experience was great at helping us prepare for those times.

The next adventure that the class did was the trip to the jail, and while most of us felt apprehensive about this at the beginning I think in the end it was a valuable experience. I was really shocked how well the prisoners in a medium security prison lived. I was even more shocked at the benefits they received surrounding health care. The government clearly thinks that preventative dental care is important enough to offer 3 units of free cleaning to the inmates, yet the only free dental coverage offered to regular community member is through CINOT (children in need of treatment) this does not include preventative treatment. Where is the justice in that? It was a good experience seeing what the clinic looked like and knowing that that type of government job exists.

Finally through the presentations of other professionals in the field I learned about so many other options I could persue. The woman who spoke to the class about her journey to Peru was amazing and so many times while she was speaking I was only hoping for the opportunity to one day partake in something as incredible. Evelyn Waters was also a welcome visitor, as she helped to explain the different courses of action that could be taken when a complaint comes in, or a refersher on the way the CDHO opporates.  The presenations of my classmates throughout the course were also very benneficial as I learned alot about different diseases and disabilities that I never knew before, and while most of the information was introductory, it was a great start to understanding some of those conditions.

My time in this class has been incredible, I feel that this course has given me more in one shot then many of the rest of them put together. Most of our other courses gave us theory and the knowledge to do different things within dental hygiene clinically, but this course actually opened the door and let us go ahead and do them ourselves within the community. For the first time I felt like a person capable of entering the workforce and providing adequate dental hygiene services from a completely different perspective then in the past. I know that I am now more prepared to make referals, call for consultations and finally report to the correct authorities when needed.

Week 11

It seems like only yesterday that we were all sitting getting to know one another. I cant believe there are only a few weeks left, I have spent almost every day with the girls in this program and it is certainly going to be strange when we no longer spend our daily lives together. I look forward to graduating as much as anyone but I’ll miss all of the girls in this class whom I have come to know as friends and respect as collegues of a shared profession. I just want to say an early thank you to these girls for sharing some of the best and worst times of my life. :D

Ok enough mushy sappiness, moving on with business.

This week the Deputy Registrar from the CDHO, Evelyn Waters came to speak to the class about jurisprudence. She was an interesting woman, she was well spoken and right from the start she made it clear that it was her job and that of the CDHO to protect the public and ensure that dental hygienists in Ontario are practicing safely.

It was a great refresher on the things that Linda discussed with us in the Professional Issues class. The topic of documentation is something that  I have always thought was important. In first year we heard a presentation made by a student who had to defend herself based on records that didn’t have much documentation in them, after that I always tried to think from the clients perspective and what they might say or ask and always document exactly what happens during the appointment, especially what is said.

We discussed the importance of the professional portfolio and how to maintain it. As well we talked a bit about the audit and the process of how that goes. Evelyn also spoke with us about the process of become self-regulated, a topic I’m sure is an interest to all of us. As students we are able to take a course and then work under a mentor, and once it is decided that we have the knowledge skill and judgment to initiate client treatment that mentor will let the CDHO know.

As graduation comes closer and closer I have never felt more mixed feelings in my life. I feel that nervous excitement of starting a new chapter in life and that terrifying feeling that I might not be ready, but underneath all of that I know that we all have been prepared for this time in our lives, we all have been given the knowledge to proceed with our learning in the world outside of Georgian College.

week 9/10

During these two weeks we discussed women’s issues and how they impact the care we deliver. I found this topic to be of particular interest as being a woman myself, I had not previously thought of women as being a unique population on their own. I had always considered that men and women were separate, but as far as oral health considerations, it didn’t really occur to me that women would have their own separate needs. … continue reading this entry.

Week 8

Welcome Back Everyone!

After a short little holiday, we are back into the groove of school once more. This week in class we presented short ten to fifteen minute presentations on topics that we selected before the reading week. We were in groups of three or four and we all presented a different health related topic that as dental hygienists we might have to make modifications to treatment to accomodate. Every group included a hand out sheet that had useful tips to help us study for our up coming test or to help us in general in our clinical setting. … continue reading this entry.

Week 7

This may have been one of our class’s most exciting weeks yet. We all got in our cars and traveled to Fenbrook correctional institution near Gravenhurst . The main reason for our visit was to tour the health services section that the institution provides to the inmates, however we were fortunate enough to get to tour most of what the facility had to offer the inmates who reside there. … continue reading this entry.

Week 6

What a week!

This week, our class was having a guest speaker Rick Tout from the OPP to speak with us about elderly abuse. I unfortunately could not attend this lecture. I was in the hospital for most of the day with what I thought was pink eye. … continue reading this entry.

Week 5

This week was a fun week, we started Monday morning off by heading back to the Innisdale High School where we would deliver our oral hygiene instructions to the student we were paired with. When I arrived, I met up with my partner Whitney and the student we were paired with Courtney. Courtney was happy to see us and quickly began telling us all about her weekend that she had just had. She told us about the “hours and hours” of shopping she had done with her mom for summer clothes, which she said was not her favorite way to spend the weekend.

… continue reading this entry.

Week Four

Week three was Victoria Day, and therefore we did not have any class.

This week was a fun week, on Monday instead of having class we traveled to a high school in Barrie to meet with the life skills class. I was fairly apprehensive about going to the school and meeting with the students. As I haven’t had any experience of this nature and was unsure of how to prepare for it.

… continue reading this entry.

Week Two

Week two has now come and gone, and what an interesting and enlightening week it was. This week, our instructor Kelly had us do a series of tasks mimicking what it would be like to have some form of disability. They were tasks such as reading a story on a page that had been written to look as though you were seeing it through the eyes of a person who was dyslexic, or to tape three fingers together on your dominant hand and write your name. Kelly took these tasks and made them a little more personal and realistic.

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Hello world!

Welcome to my blog page! This will be a journal of the happenings, thoughts and comments about the Unique Populations class that I’m currently taking. I along with my other classmates are taking this class to gain better awareness and empathy for individuals who have cognitive, physical, psychological, sensory or emotional needs including how to recognize barriers to care and modify care to meet their needs.

… continue reading this entry.