Depends on the disability. With someone in a wheelchair due to cross-sectional paralysis, one can probably handle more than a schizophrenic, who is convinced that the dentist is the king of wild hunting and wants to kill him.
Yeah, sure. My dentist and her employees can do this perfectly.
I can't hear and speak loudly and am a total prosthesis wearer in the upper and lower jaws.
I used to have more complicated treatments, since I am countless and total prosthesis wearer, I only have to regularly control and suppress my prostheses.
It depends on practice.
Some dentists can handle well with disabled people and are very sensitive and sensitive.
Other dentists are absolutely not sensitive to their disabled patients, are distracted, anti-disabled and operate medical gas lighting.
Yes depends on how the person behaves. Annoying patients always exist – both disabled and non-disabled
comes to disability if you can't sit still there might be a problem asking the doctor if he takes the disabled as a patient
Yes, yes.
Depends on the disability. With someone in a wheelchair due to cross-sectional paralysis, one can probably handle more than a schizophrenic, who is convinced that the dentist is the king of wild hunting and wants to kill him.
Yeah, sure. My dentist and her employees can do this perfectly.
I can't hear and speak loudly and am a total prosthesis wearer in the upper and lower jaws.
I used to have more complicated treatments, since I am countless and total prosthesis wearer, I only have to regularly control and suppress my prostheses.
We agree in writing that works perfectly.