Dental Students' and Dental School Graduates' Practical Skills: An International Survey of Perceptions of National Dental Associations in Europe.
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BORIS DOI
Date of Publication
February 20, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute
Contributor
Dianišková, Simona | |
Cavallé, Edoardo | |
Aliyeva, Rena | |
Cagetti, Maria-Grazia | |
Campus, Guglielmo | |
Deschner, James | |
Forna, Norina | |
Ilhan, Duygu | |
Mazevet, Marco | |
Lella, Anna | |
Melo, Paulo | |
Perlea, Paula | |
Rovera, Angela | |
Sharkov, Nikolai | |
Slutsky, Ariel | |
Torres, António Roma | |
Saag, Mare |
Series
Oral Health and Preventive Dentistry
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1757-9996
1602-1622
Publisher
Quintessence Publishing
Language
English
Publisher DOI
PubMed ID
38376435
Uncontrolled Keywords
Description
Purpose
Dental students learn knowledge and practical skills to provide oral health care to the population. Practical skills must be maintained or continuously developed throughout a professional career. This cross-sectional survey aimed to evaluate the perception of practical skills of dental students and dental-school graduates by national dental associations (NDAs) in international comparison in the European Regional Organization of the FDI World Dental Federation (ERO-FDI) zone.Materials And Methods
A questionnaire of 14 items collected information on pre-/postgraduate areas.Results
A total of 25 countries participated (response rate: 69.4%), with 80.0% having minimum requirements for practical skills acquisition and 64.0% starting practical training in the 3rd year of study. In countries where clinical practical work on patients begins in the 2nd year of study, practical skills of graduates are perceived as average, starting in the 3rd year of study as mainly good, starting in the 4th as varying widely from poor to very good. In total, 76.0% of respondents feel that improvements are needed before entering dental practice. Improvements could be reached by treating more patients in dental school (32.0%), increasing the quantity of clinical training (20.0%), or having more clinical instructors (12.0%). In 56.0% of the countries, it is possible to open one's own dental practice immediately after graduation, and in 16.0%, prior vocational training is mandatory.Conclusions
All participating countries in the ERO-FDI zone reported practical training in dental school, most starting in the 3rd year of study. The perception of practical skills of dental students and dental-school graduates among NDAs is very heterogeneous. Reasons for the perceived deficiencies should be further explored.
Dental students learn knowledge and practical skills to provide oral health care to the population. Practical skills must be maintained or continuously developed throughout a professional career. This cross-sectional survey aimed to evaluate the perception of practical skills of dental students and dental-school graduates by national dental associations (NDAs) in international comparison in the European Regional Organization of the FDI World Dental Federation (ERO-FDI) zone.Materials And Methods
A questionnaire of 14 items collected information on pre-/postgraduate areas.Results
A total of 25 countries participated (response rate: 69.4%), with 80.0% having minimum requirements for practical skills acquisition and 64.0% starting practical training in the 3rd year of study. In countries where clinical practical work on patients begins in the 2nd year of study, practical skills of graduates are perceived as average, starting in the 3rd year of study as mainly good, starting in the 4th as varying widely from poor to very good. In total, 76.0% of respondents feel that improvements are needed before entering dental practice. Improvements could be reached by treating more patients in dental school (32.0%), increasing the quantity of clinical training (20.0%), or having more clinical instructors (12.0%). In 56.0% of the countries, it is possible to open one's own dental practice immediately after graduation, and in 16.0%, prior vocational training is mandatory.Conclusions
All participating countries in the ERO-FDI zone reported practical training in dental school, most starting in the 3rd year of study. The perception of practical skills of dental students and dental-school graduates among NDAs is very heterogeneous. Reasons for the perceived deficiencies should be further explored.
File(s)
File | File Type | Format | Size | License | Publisher/Copright statement | Content | |
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ohpd_2024_s0115_wolf_b4997035.pdf | text | Adobe PDF | 239.32 KB | Attribution (CC BY 4.0) | published |