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Millions of Australians live with a disability, but dental care remains out of reach for many
Cameron Bloomfield hasn’t had a regimen dental check-up considering the fact that he was in most important faculty. “I have only observed dentists when I had a toothache. I’ve under no circumstances had a frequent dentist, like you have a frequent health care provider,” the 37-calendar year-old says. “It’s much too high-priced, getting an intellectual incapacity and becoming on the incapacity pension.” Accessing dental care has normally been a fight involving prolonged community dental waitlists and, at moments, determined calls to his contacts in the disability sector. As an grownup, Mr Bloomfield has only found a dentist a handful of instances — constantly in emergencies — and most usually those…