| In The News
Delta Dental of Massachusetts wins leadership award
Delta Economics, Penn Well
BOSTON, Massachusetts--Jane Doe has announced it will award Delta
Dental of Massachusetts with the Spirit Award for Community Leadership
for its Dental Outreach to Survivors program, an initiative that
provides oral health care to individuals and families affected by
domestic violence.
"The extraordinary corporate leadership demonstrated by Delta
Dental of Massachusetts has and will continue to make a difference
in the lives of so many survivors and their children," said
Mary R. Lauby, executive director of Jane Doe Inc.
The Dental Outreach to Survivors program, a partnership with Tufts
University School of Dental Medicine, the Boston Public Health Commission
and the Asian Task Force Against Domestic Violence (ATask), ensures
that oral health professionals and students are trained and knowledgeable
in providing culturally competent, compassionate oral health treatment
to individuals with complex medical and social issues.
"Delta Dental has helped create an innovative model that if
replicated by others in the health care arena will significantly
impact and reduce the number of women, children, and men affected
by domestic violence," said Jamie Kim Ramola of ATask.
Studies show that nearly 75 percent of all domestic violence injuries
involve head, neck or mouth trauma. As health care professionals,
dentists, hygienists and oral surgeons are in a unique position
to identify the signs of domestic violence and offer support and
appropriate intervention to their patients who are survivors.
"This provides hundreds of survivors of domestic violence,
including many children, with the routine, preventive care critical
to a healthy future," said Dr. Kathy O'Loughlin, president
and CEO of Delta Dental of Massachusetts. "It is important
to us that these families are not left behind."
"We are enormously grateful to Delta Dental for their vision
and support of our students," said Dr. Kanchan Ganda, Professor
of General Dentistry at Tufts University School of Dental Medicine.
"Real world experience is crucial in the learning process.
Not only do our students treat survivors of domestic violence during
their training years, but they are better equipped and more aware
of domestic violence indicators in patients when they leave school.
Our involvement in this initiative has also helped to educate our
faculty members and alumni in the treatment of patients who are
survivors of domestic violence."
|