Despite dedicated government funding, Aboriginal Australians, including children, experience more dental disease than other Australians, despite it being seen as mostly preventable. The ongoing legacy of colonization and discrimination against Aboriginal Australians persists, even in health services. Current neoliberal discourse often holds individuals responsible for the state of their health, rather than the structural factors beyond individual control. While presenting a balanced view of Aboriginal health is important and attests to Indigenous peoples’ resilience when faced with persistent adversity, calling to account those structural factors affecting the ability of Aboriginal people to make favorable oral health choices is also import...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
The aim of this study was to explore whether oral health was an important consideration for Aborigin...
Despite the preventive nature of oral diseases and their significance for general wellbeing, poor or...
Background: Improving oral health for Aboriginal Australians has been slow. Despite dental disease b...
Background The oral health of a child not only impacts the physical well-being of the child, but can...
Abstract Background During the 1970s, optimal oral health was experienced more frequently amongst In...
Background: Improving oral health for Aboriginal Australians has been slow. Despite dental disease b...
Background: During the 1970s, optimal oral health was experienced more frequently amongst Indigenous...
Background: The disproportionate burden of oral disease in Aboriginal children and the issues in acc...
Despite the preventive nature of oral diseases and their significance for general wellbeing, poor or...
BACKGROUND:Many factors influence how a person experiences oral health and how such experiences may ...
Background: Many factors influence how a person experiences oral health and how such experiences may...
Issue addressed: Dental decay is prevalent among Australian Aboriginal children, yet little is known...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
The aim of this study was to explore whether oral health was an important consideration for Aborigin...
Despite the preventive nature of oral diseases and their significance for general wellbeing, poor or...
Background: Improving oral health for Aboriginal Australians has been slow. Despite dental disease b...
Background The oral health of a child not only impacts the physical well-being of the child, but can...
Abstract Background During the 1970s, optimal oral health was experienced more frequently amongst In...
Background: Improving oral health for Aboriginal Australians has been slow. Despite dental disease b...
Background: During the 1970s, optimal oral health was experienced more frequently amongst Indigenous...
Background: The disproportionate burden of oral disease in Aboriginal children and the issues in acc...
Despite the preventive nature of oral diseases and their significance for general wellbeing, poor or...
BACKGROUND:Many factors influence how a person experiences oral health and how such experiences may ...
Background: Many factors influence how a person experiences oral health and how such experiences may...
Issue addressed: Dental decay is prevalent among Australian Aboriginal children, yet little is known...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (respectfully, subsequently referred to as Indigenous) childre...
The aim of this study was to explore whether oral health was an important consideration for Aborigin...
Despite the preventive nature of oral diseases and their significance for general wellbeing, poor or...