Romer M, Dougherty N, Amores-Lafleur E
Department of Dentistry, Rose F. Kennedy Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA.
ASDC J Dent Child. 1999 Mar-Apr;66(2):132-5, 85.
The number of people with mental retardation and developmental disabilities (MR/DD) living in small community-based group residences is increasing throughout the United States. Dental services to this population, once provided in large institutional settings, must increasingly be sought at the community level. The purpose of this study was to determine whether U.S. and Canadian dental schools are adequately training their students to provide quality dental care to this group with complex psychosocial and medical issues. With a response rate of 78 percent to a mail survey, it was found that 53 percent of the schools provide less than five hours of didactic training in special care dentistry. Clinical training in this area comprised only 0-5 percent of predoctoral students' time in 73 percent of the responding schools.
在美国,居住在小型社区集体住所中的智力迟钝和发育障碍(MR/DD)患者数量正在增加。曾经在大型机构环境中提供的针对这一人群的牙科服务,现在越来越多地需要在社区层面寻求。本研究的目的是确定美国和加拿大的牙科学校是否正在充分培训其学生,以便为这一具有复杂心理社会和医疗问题的群体提供高质量的牙科护理。通过对邮件调查78%的回复率发现,53%的学校在特殊护理牙科方面提供的理论培训时间少于5小时。在73%的回复学校中,这一领域的临床培训仅占博士生时间的0 - 5%。