Oral Health Care in the 21st Century
- 1 December 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Academic Medicine
- Vol. 76 (12) , 1181-1206
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00001888-200112000-00009
Abstract
The past decade has been turbulent for dental education, marked by debate about the future directions of the curriculum and the profession itself. The bulk of the dental school curriculum is still devoted to tooth restoration or replacement techniques, although the need for these procedures has declined. Some dental educators now advocate an oral physician model as the desired direction for the profession, with expanded training in systemic disease pathophysiology and a practice scope that extends beyond exclusive focus on the teeth and supporting structures. Proponents of this model contend for curriculum time with faculty who desire to maintain a technical focus. The outcome of this curricular tug-of-war has implications for medical education, because many oral health problems now fall into the overlapping educational and patient care environments of physicians, dentists, and other health care providers. Will physicians perceive the new dentist as an encroachment on territory or as a resource to enhance patient care? Within dentistry, the traditions of tooth restoration and prosthodontics shape the profession's culture. Are dental educators ready to reconfigure a curriculum that is deeply intertwined with the professional identity of 150,000 U.S. dentists practicing today? To stimulate thinking about these issues, the authors analyze the responses of dental education to changes in the public's oral health and to calls for curricular reform, propose strategies for modifying the way dentists are prepared for their professional responsibilities, and explore the sociology of change in academic institutions, because elements of dental education targeted for reform are revered components of school culture.Keywords
This publication has 92 references indexed in Scilit:
- Smoking in adolescence as a predictor of early loss of periodontal attachmentCommunity Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology, 2001
- Cultures in conflictAcademic Medicine, 1998
- Competency-driven, component-based curriculum architecturePerformance + Instruction, 1996
- Cigarette smoking: an epidemiological overviewBritish Medical Bulletin, 1996
- Faculty development and academic vitalityAcademic Medicine, 1993
- The medical school curriculum committee revisitedAcademic Medicine, 1993
- Oral health problems and needs of nursing home residentsCommunity Dentistry and Oral Epidemiology, 1993
- The medical school as a social organization: the sources of resistance to changeMedical Education, 1989
- Making doctors—a new approachTeaching and Learning in Medicine, 1989
- Leadership: The Management of MeaningThe Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 1982