Department of Oral Health Sciences, Faculty of Dentistry, University of British Columbia, 2199 Wesbrook Mall, Vancouver, British Columbia, V6T 1Z3, Canada.
J Dent Educ. 2010 Jan;74(1):13-9.
Education in dentistry as in medicine is guided principally by the ontology and theory of science, which provides definitions of health and disease, legitimizes research methods, and influences the role of the clinician. The challenge of managing chronic oral disease and disability prompts interest in social theory as much as science. Therefore, dental geriatrics requires a solid foundation in the humanities from the belief that the determinants of health and the cause of chronic diseases lie within an intermingling of biology, economics, sociocultural structure, and human behavior. The dental curriculum in many places is reorganizing from the horizontal foundation of basic sciences to an integration of foundational and clinical knowledge focused on clinical competencies and integrated care. The impact of this integration on dental geriatrics necessitates a more humanistic and naturalistic perspective in dental education to balance and challenge the current evidence for best clinical practice, which at present is based almost exclusively on science. Consequently, dental students should be exposed to a consilience of the science and the humanities if dentists are to address effectively the needs of an aging population.
正如在医学领域一样,牙科学的教育主要由科学的本体论和理论指导,其为健康和疾病下定义、使研究方法合法化,并影响临床医生的角色。管理慢性口腔疾病和残疾的挑战不仅促使人们对社会理论产生兴趣,也促使人们对科学产生兴趣。因此,牙科老年医学需要坚实的人文学科基础,因为人们相信健康的决定因素和慢性病的病因存在于生物学、经济学、社会文化结构和人类行为的交织之中。许多地方的牙科课程正在从基础科学的横向基础重新组织为以临床能力和综合护理为重点的基础和临床知识的整合。这种整合对牙科老年医学的影响要求在牙科教育中采取更具人文主义和自然主义的观点,以平衡和挑战目前基于科学的最佳临床实践的证据。因此,如果牙医要有效地满足老龄化人口的需求,就应该让牙科学生接触到科学和人文学科的融合。