Rarotongan communities to receive free dental care from Kiwi volunteers
The Wrigley Company Foundation along with the New Zealand Dental Association (NZDA) today announced the 2017 recipient
of a US$5,000 dental grant to help improve dental care and education in the Pacific Islands.
This year, the grant has been given to a team of dental professionals from the Merivale Dental Group in Christchurch,
New Zealand, known as the ‘MDG Angels’, who applied for the grant after one of their staff visited the Cook Islands and
saw the vital need that exists there for better dental care. The funding will allow the five MDG Angels to take their
services to Rarotonga for a week-long offering of free dental services and education for targeted patients.
“We are thrilled to have received this grant to support our programme, which is designed to help combat the prevalence
of periodontal diseases and oral infections due to the lack of prevention and access to dental services in Rarotonga,”
says Dr. Jenny Kim, a director of the Merivale Dental Group, who spearheaded the team initiative.
Dr. Kim says the programme will also involve teaching children about the importance of oral hygiene from a young age,
including correct brushing and flossing techniques, as well as discussion around the implications of high plaque levels
and a high sugar diet.
Adult Cook Islanders will benefit with the programme aiming to offer dental services in partnership with the local
hospital to target diabetic patients and those under cardiovascular care, offering periodontal assessment and treatment,
radiographs, extractions of abscessed teeth and restorative dentistry for carious teeth. Any leftover supplies will be
donated to a clinic in Tupapa.
Dr. Kim says the group will treat this programme as a pilot, following which they plan to undertake a thorough
evaluation process to improve on efficiencies for future roll-outs.
In 2012, the partnership between the Wrigley Company Foundation and the NZDA was formed to improve the reach and quality
of dental treatment and education to at-risk communities. The Community Service Grant programme provides funding to
volunteer dentists and teams of allied dental professionals to cover the purchase of supplies, treatments and other
expenses including educational material, to develop new and expand existing oral health community service projects in
New Zealand and the Pacific.
“This year, we received 26 applications of merit from across the country and we are thrilled that funding from the
grants will have a positive impact on oral health education and treatment for many at-need Kiwis and this year, Cook
Islanders,” says Wrigley Pacific Corporate Affairs Director, Catherine Pemberton.
“The grants are vitally important to help dental professionals carry out much needed community service work for
vulnerable people from all sorts of communities.”
ENDS