scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Patient perceptions of professionalism in dentistry.

TLDR
Research found that all dental care providers displayed a professional appearance as well as behavior, and the attire of the dental care provider affected the comfort and anxiety levels of patients, as did first impressions of both students and faculty.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine how patients perceived the professionalism of University of Minnesota School of Dentistry students, faculty, and staff. Professionalism is defined by the authors as an image that will promote a successful relationship with the patient. Patients within comprehensive care clinics were asked to assess physical attributes and behaviors of the dental care providers using a questionnaire. The patients read statements dealing with characteristics of the dental care providers and responded as to whether they agreed, were neutral, or disagreed with the statement. The surveyed population consisted of 103 males and 97 females, 64 percent of whom lacked insurance coverage. Fifty-one percent of the patients were between the ages of forty-four and sixty-nine, but the overall age distribution was dispersed over a range of eighteen to one hundred. Our research found that all dental care providers displayed a professional appearance as well as behavior. The attire of the dental care provider affected the comfort and anxiety levels of patients, as did first impressions of both students and faculty. Most patients reported that students and faculty displayed effective time management and used appropriate language during the appointment. Finally, hairstyle, makeup, and jewelry appeared to have little effect on patients' opinions of the various dental care providers.

read more

Citations
More filters

Annual review of nursing education

TL;DR: This book covers trends and innovative strategies to help you develop a curriculum and be more effective in using it and is a resource no nursing education program can afford to be without.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strategies for combating dental anxiety.

TL;DR: Survey data may assist dental professionals in understanding and combating patients' dental anxiety, in order to increase the frequency of dental visits and to prompt a corresponding restoration or maintenance of oral health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dental professionalism: definitions and debate.

TL;DR: A debate on concepts of professionalism within dentistry is opened, drawing on established thoughts in medicine and more limited material from the dental domain, to contribute to the wider debate on professionalism by tackling the business angle, which has been largely ignored by medical counterparts.
Journal ArticleDOI

What to wear? The influence of attire on the perceived professionalism of dentists and lawyers

TL;DR: Using a sample of 201 participants and a between-subjects design, the perceived professionalism—suitability, capability, ease to talk to and friendliness— of male and female dentists and lawyers in various attires was examined.
Journal ArticleDOI

Children's and parents' attitudes towards dentists' attire.

TL;DR: Children preferred dental students in casual attire, both children and parents ranked formal white in favour of a paediatric coat and there was a highly significant difference in preference of the participants towards the sex of their dental health care provider.
References
More filters
Book

Dress for Success

Journal ArticleDOI

Patients' and physicians' attitudes regarding the physician's professional appearance.

TL;DR: Overall, patients were less discriminating in their attitude toward physician appearance than physicians, and patients rated traditional items less positively and casual items less negatively.
Journal ArticleDOI

The social psychological implications of facial physical attractiveness.

TL;DR: The relatively swift alteration of facial form may alter an individual's life in ways that neither the patient nor the practitioner fully anticipated as discussed by the authors, and these consequences may be better anticipated, investigated, and ultimately understood.
Journal ArticleDOI

Symptom disclosure to male and female physicians: effects of sex, physical attractiveness, and symptom type.

TL;DR: Patients' willingness to disclose symptoms to male and female physicians whose photographs had been pretested as being either physically attractive or physically unattractive was related to the more physically attractive physicians and same-sex match-ups between patient and physician.
Related Papers (5)