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The revitalization of U.S. dental education.

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TLDR
This presentation makes recommendations for rethinking the current system of dental education in order to elevate dentistry to its rightful place as a vibrant health care leader.
Abstract
Revitalization of dental education in the United States is an imperative, but it depends mainly on the willingness of dental school faculty to make great changes. My remarks address a system of education of dental professionals in relation to other health professionals whose vision seems at times to have surpassed ours. I advocate for a revitalization of our profession in order to stand at the fore when it comes to ensuring the health and well-being of the public. Thanks to advances in molecular medicine, health care is being transformed from a system of treating disease to one that provides predictive, preemptive, and personalized care. This presentation makes recommendations for rethinking the current system of dental education in order to elevate dentistry to its rightful place as a vibrant health care leader. Dental education needs to be a source of new knowledge, discovery, and innovation to sustain its legacy as a learned profession. Graduates must be lifelong learners who can critically evaluate science and technology for the good of their patients. Future dentists should be providers of primary care, yet data suggest that the organizational structure to support this vision is lacking. The accreditation system, interrelated with licensure and National Boards, needs to set a better floor. While independence is an admirable goal, I see too much variation in the accreditation system. We must overcome fears and politics to upgrade the profession as pharmacy did when it introduced the Pharm.D. degree. With that came a change in the entire system of pharmacy education and clinical practice and recognition of pharmacists as members of an interdisciplinary health care team. Dentistry and dental education are doing a lot that is good, but we must and can do even better if the profession is to thrive as a respected member of the health professions delivering high-quality, evidence-based care to the public. Dental students, faculty, and practitioners must have command of new and coming scientific advances and technologies that will have a profound impact on the practice of dentistry. We must take the long view in educating our students so they will, as practitioners, be able to expertly evaluate and use new technologies throughout their careers. With regard to technologies, three examples may help clarify their future importance in dentistry: 1) oral fluids and tissues are natural tools for health surveillance; 2) within the next five to ten years, microarrays of all 700 bacterial species will be available for diagnostic purposes as will treatment tied to this diagnostic tool; and 3) biomarkers of inflammation will continue to develop into chair-side technologies with appropriate treatments. These three examples-along with spectacular advances in imaging, materials science, stem cell biology, and regenerative medicine-signal the need for rigorous change in dental education and practice. If we desire twenty-first century clinicians, we are obligated to teach students to "learn how to learn." We must teach them to practice evidence-based dental medicine. We must teach them to operate as members of interdisciplinary, primary health care teams. Moreover, we must ensure that the face of the profession-its practitioners-reflects the rich diversity of the community. Attendees at the Macy convocation are in a position to provide leadership, to work with appropriate organizations, and to enable Pharm.D.-like consensus. It behooves us to agree on a unified vision for revitalizing dental education. The vision should be based on a set of principles, either those originally laid out by W.J. Gies in 1926 or ones that may be a better fit with this day and age. The following are several recommendations for transformative change in dental education. In my view, based on my experience as a dental professional and leader, and by looking beyond our educational boundaries to places like MIT, I believe that they may be the most promising: 1) think BIG!; 2) involve students in hands-on learning experiences from day one; and 3) provide students and the profession with the tools to tackle major biomedical, clinical care, and societal issues including access to care, cost of care, HIV, emerging infectious diseases, elder care, and many others. In fact, I believe that we already know what to do to upgrade the dental profession. We need to make it happen. We need to act as catalysts for change. We understand that change is necessary but continue to struggle with implementing sustained curriculum reform and regulatory reform. Why? Partly because we have not convinced the dental profession and the education community that a crisis really exists. "Crisis" may sound to the uninformed like crying wolf, especially in a climate in which dentists in private practice are doing exceedingly well. Further, we have not provided a compelling vision for the future. Transformation will require a profound reexamination of what we are doing today and what is necessary for survival and sustained growth. We must keep pace with new knowledge and methods of teaching-unless, of course, we choose to subscribe to the facetious message of W. Edwards Deming, who is credited with rebuilding the Japanese economy after World War II: "It is not necessary to change. Survival is not mandatory."

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Citations
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Position of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics: Oral Health and Nutrition

TL;DR: The multifaceted interactions between diet, nutrition, and oral health in practice, education, and research in both dietetics and dentistry merit continued, detailed delineation.
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Is Dentistry at Risk? A Case for Interprofessional Education

TL;DR: It is argued that little has changed in the way dental students are taught and prepared to participate in interprofessional education, and academic dentistry and organized dentistry must take the lead in initiating and demanding IPE if dentalStudents are to be prepared to work in the health care environment of the twenty-first century.
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Validation of an instrument to assess evidence-based practice knowledge, attitudes, access, and confidence in the dental environment.

TL;DR: The validation of an assessment instrument designed to measure the outcomes of training in evidence-based practice (EBP) in the context of dentistry concludes that the KACE has good discriminative validity, responsiveness to training effects, and test-retest reliability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soft skills and dental education

TL;DR: The different soft skills, how they are taught and assessed and the issues that need to be addressed in their teaching and assessment are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

A functional natural dentition for all--and for life? The oral healthcare system needs revision.

TL;DR: A radical reform of the oral healthcare system is advocated involving the training of two new types of professionals integrated with the general healthcare system: the highly skilled professional specialised in the diagnosis and control of oral diseases and the oral clinical specialist, whose role is the provision of advanced oral rehabilitation.
References
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Oral Health in America: A Report of the Surgeon General

C Scully, +1 more
TL;DR: The U.S. surgeon general's first official report on oral health elaborates on the meaning of oral health and explains why oral health is essential to general health and well-being.
Book

Dental Education at the Crossroads: Challenges and Change

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a comprehensive survey of the education, research, and patient care missions of dental schools and provide specific recommendations on oral health assessment, access to dental care, dental school curricula, financing for education and research priorities, examinations and licensing, workforce planning, and other key areas.
Journal ArticleDOI

The dental curriculum at North American dental institutions in 2002-03: a survey of current structure, recent innovations, and planned changes.

TL;DR: The most frequent innovations in the past three years were increased use of computer and web-based learning, creation of patient care experiences early in the curriculum, enhancement of competency evaluation methods, and curriculum decompression.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oral health care in the 21st century: implications for dental and medical education.

TL;DR: The responses of dental education to changes in the public's oral health and to calls for curricular reform are analyzed, strategies for modifying the way dentists are prepared for their professional responsibilities are proposed, and the sociology of change in academic institutions are explored.
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In my view, based on my experience as a dental professional and leader, and by looking beyond our educational boundaries to places like MIT, I believe that they may be the most promising: 1) think BIG!