Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Dr. Harinder Dhanju: Addressing dental needs in the community

Darpan News Desk, 12 Apr, 2019 12:29 AM

    Dr. Dhanju is proud of the work POHS does for the community. “This is the only non-profit providing services like these in the Lower Mainland. Other institutions and professionals should learn from this model and set up such organizations around BC and Canada to give services to the community where it is needed.”

     

     


    Dr. Harinder Dhanju, well-known dentist and active member of British Columbia Dental Association since 1998, believes that charity begins at home. Since the start of his dental profession, Dr. Dhanju always looked into his own neighbourhood and community to offer his services to those in need. “I saw a lot of people unable to afford procedures and suffering, so I started giving free services at my own clinic,” shares Dr. Dhanju who soon realised that the need for cost-effective dental services was much bigger than he imagined.
     
    This demand for dental care was tested in 2010, when Dr. Dhanju organized a small group of dedicated dentists and dental team members to provide free dental tests in his Newton office. The response was overwhelming; over 350 people came in to receive dental care. This was an indication that there was a substantial need for oral health care among those who could not access it through conventional dental care settings. This realization encouraged Dr. Dhanju to found Pacific Oral Health Society (POHS) in 2013.


     
    Affiliated with University of British Columbia (UBC) Dentistry, POHS is dedicated to providing access to inexpensive oral and dental health care for lower income and vulnerable individuals and families in the Fraser Valley region. The non-profit offers a full range of dental services including general and family dentistry; pedodontics (children’s dentistry); periodontics (gum treatment), endodontics (root canal) dental implants and oral surgery. “Patients come all the way from Hope, Chilliwack, Abbotsford, Richmond and Vancouver to seek dental services. We have grown from four to 22 support staff, along with over eight dentists,” says Dr. Dhanju proudly.
     
    Besides helping the disadvantaged, POHS offers foreign dental graduates various courses and a state of the art facility in which to practise in preparation for the National Dental Examining Board of Canada (NDEB) examinations. The Society also plays a vital role in educating and encouraging the younger generation about the dental profession. “We offer dental graduates and youngsters hands-on experience to understand what a dental profession entails,” explains Dr. Dhanju who is a Clinical Assistant Professor at UBC’s Dentistry faculty. Additionally, the facility delivers continuing dental education programs to dental professional living in the region.
     


    Dr. Dhanju is continuously educating and motivating the public regarding oral health diseases through dental awareness camps and events. Every year during fall season Rotary Club assist POHS to organize free oral cancer screening event where people can get a dental check-up done free of cost. “In the past we have saved a few lives,” mentions Dr. Dhanju, “because every year we shortlist 20 to 30 people who show signs of cancer in their mouth but they don’t even know it exists. With the help of BC Oral Cancer Prevention Program, we speed up their file and they get the proper treatment so that the cancer does not spread further.”
     
    Dr. Dhanju is proud of the work POHS does for the community. “This is the only non-profit providing services like these in the Lower Mainland. Other institutions and professionals should learn from this model and set up such organizations around BC and Canada to give services to the community where it is needed.”


     
    Pacific Oral Health Centre



    Suite 300 - 15850 24 Avenue Surrey BC V3Z 0G1
    Telephone: 604-536-2700
    Email: info@pohs.ca

    www.pohs.ca

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dozens Of Delegates Turn Their Backs On Trudeau As PM Defends His Feminist Credentials After Tossing 2 Women From Liberal Caucus

    Dozens Of Delegates Turn Their Backs On Trudeau As PM Defends His Feminist Credentials After Tossing 2 Women From Liberal Caucus
    Tracy Beshara, executive director of Marpole Oakridge Family Place in south Vancouver, said she has met Wilson-Raybould and she is a woman of "integrity and quality."

    Dozens Of Delegates Turn Their Backs On Trudeau As PM Defends His Feminist Credentials After Tossing 2 Women From Liberal Caucus

    Canada'S Failure To Fight Climate Change 'Disturbing,' Environment Watchdog Says

    Canada'S Failure To Fight Climate Change 'Disturbing,' Environment Watchdog Says
    OTTAWA — Environment Commissioner Julie Gelfand says Canada is not doing enough to combat climate change.    

    Canada'S Failure To Fight Climate Change 'Disturbing,' Environment Watchdog Says

    Cabinet Members Openly Debate Jody Wilson-Raybould's Future In Liberal Caucus

    Jane Philpott left a meeting of her fellow Ontario Liberal MPs after just a few minutes Tuesday afternoon, leaving them to debate her future in the party caucus without her.    

    Cabinet Members Openly Debate Jody Wilson-Raybould's Future In Liberal Caucus

    Preliminary Search Finds No Reports Of Coerced Sterilization To Police: RCMP

    Preliminary Search Finds No Reports Of Coerced Sterilization To Police: RCMP
    In a letter to NDP health critic Don Davies, RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki says the Mounties searched their national database but did not find any criminal reports of forced or coerced sterilization.

    Preliminary Search Finds No Reports Of Coerced Sterilization To Police: RCMP

    MP Tony Clement Says He Will Not Seek Re-Election In October

    MP Tony Clement Says He Will Not Seek Re-Election In October
    OTTAWA — MP Tony Clement says he will not seek re-election, citing a desire to continue a "better lived life."    

    MP Tony Clement Says He Will Not Seek Re-Election In October

    Coleman Says Boyle's Violence Got Worse As Captivity Wore On

    Joshua Boyle's estranged wife is detailing in court today his increasingly unsettled state as their time as hostages in Afghanistan wore on, and her hope the beatings she suffered in captivity would end with their release.

    Coleman Says Boyle's Violence Got Worse As Captivity Wore On