Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Dental Medicine's Robert I. Schattner Oral Health Center for People with Disabilities

The Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Dental Medicine will establish the Robert I. Schattner Oral Health Center for People with Disabilities, a state-of-the-art facility that will provide accessible, optimal care for this underserved population and specialized training for dental professionals.

WHY?

More than 1.5 million children and adult Israelis live with physical, cognitive, and developmental disabilities.

  • 270,000 children (nearly 8% of all Israeli children)
  • 510,000 adults 65+
  • 785,000 adult professionals
  • 471,000 severely disabled adults age 20+

Accessible dental facilities with adaptive equipment and specially trained dental care providers in one location does not currently exist anywhere in the country.

The Robert I. Schattner Oral Health Center for People with Disabilities is part of an overall planned five-floor renovation, construction, and equipment upgrade for the Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Dental Medicine.

Situated on the ground floor to ensure accessibility, the multi-disciplinary, holistic care Center will provide customized treatment to meet a wide variety of disabilities and will serve as a center of teaching excellence, with a facility to conduct groundbreaking research by the School’s seven clinical departments comprised of all specialties in dental medicine.

The Center is inspired by D. Walter Cohen’s vision of the dental profession as vital to assuring the health and well-being of all people, especially those whose needs stretch beyond the bounds of traditional training.

Consistent with the university’s mission to serve Israel by training its scientific, educational, and professional leadership and to serve humanity by extending the frontiers of knowledge, this project will bridge the gap between understanding the significance of oral health and assuring its availability to all.

The Hebrew University-Hadassah School of Dental Medicine provides dental treatment to hundreds of patients daily with expertise in addressing unique and complex dental health challenges. The school is committed to core values related to diversity and compassion, providing its services to a wide range of patients including Arabs, Ultra-Orthodox Jews, Holocaust survivors, and new immigrants.