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Resumen de Public Dental Services, Queensland: Alfred James Hoole

Harry Francis Akers, Michael Anthony Foley, John P. Brown, Valerie Woodford

  • Historians have given limited attention to the genesis and evolution of public dental services across Queensland. The Secretary [Minister] for Home Affairs and later Premier, Edward 'Ned' Hanlon, was the political architect of accessible public hospital and dental facilities. However it was administrator and dentist, Alfred James Hoole, who orchestrated the practical details in the field. Hoole developed an extensive and successful government-administered, hospital-based dental service that, in terms of reach and workforce, was the contemporaneous leader in Australia. These clinics and affiliated school dental services delivered treatment to a disproportionately high percentage of socially disadvantaged and remotely domiciled Queenslanders. Hoole's career progression from Superintendent of the Brisbane Dental Hospital to Director of Dental Services is remarkable for its achievements, consequences, competency and duration. It originated from a limited secondary education and traversed the bitter political split of 1957, changes of government, minister and fiscal policy, health adversity and opposition from private practitioners. Hoole, an anointed leader, a ministerial confidant and a pragmatist, served on authorities and institutions that shaped the future of dental education and dental practice across the state. Forty-five years after his death, Hoole's contribution to the administration of public dental services in Queensland remains unrivalled.


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