University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY, USA.
Community Dent Oral Epidemiol. 2014 Feb;42(1):1-10. doi: 10.1111/cdoe.12052. Epub 2013 May 3.
Access to adequate oral health care is deficient in many parts of the world. Many countries are now using dental therapists to increase access, particularly for children. To inform the discussion on dental therapists in the workforce, particularly in the United States, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation funded a review of the global literature to identify as many documents as possible related to the practice of dental therapists since the establishment of the School Dental Service in New Zealand in 1921.
Consultants in each of the countries considered to have a substantive literature on dental therapists were asked to participate in the research; seventeen in total. In addition to identifying and reviewing published articles, a focus of the research was on identifying 'gray' documents. Standard databases were searched for key words associated with dental therapists. In addition, searches were conducted of the governmental and dental association websites of all countries known to have dental therapists in their oral health workforce.
Fifty-four countries, both developing and developed, were identified where dental therapists are members of the workforce. Eleven hundred documents were identified from 26 of these countries, with over 2/3 of them cited in the published monograph. Reliable evidence from the related literature and verbal communication confirmed the utilization of dental therapists in an additional 28 countries. Thirty-three of the countries were members of the Commonwealth of Nations, suggesting a mechanism of spread from New Zealand. Variable lengths of training/education existed for dental therapists with the tradition being 2 years postsecondary. In a few countries, the training of therapists and hygienists is now being combined in a three academic year program. Historically, dental therapists have been employed by government agencies caring for children, typically in school-based programs. Initiatives in some countries allow limited care for adults by dental therapists with additional training.
The evidence indicates that dental therapists provide effective, quality, and safe care for children in an economical manner and are generally accepted both by the public and where their use is established, by the dental profession.
在世界上许多地方,人们获得足够的口腔保健服务的机会有限。许多国家现在正在使用牙科治疗师来增加服务的可及性,特别是针对儿童。为了在劳动力中讨论牙科治疗师,特别是在美国,W.K. 凯洛格基金会资助了一项对全球文献的审查,以确定自 1921 年新西兰建立学校牙科服务以来,尽可能多的与牙科治疗师实践相关的文件。
要求每个被认为有实质性牙科治疗师文献的国家的顾问参与研究;共有 17 名顾问。除了确定和审查已发表的文章外,研究的重点还在于确定“灰色”文件。标准数据库中搜索了与牙科治疗师相关的关键词。此外,还对所有已知在其口腔卫生劳动力中拥有牙科治疗师的国家的政府和牙科协会网站进行了搜索。
确定了 54 个发展中国家和发达国家,这些国家的牙科治疗师是劳动力的一部分。从其中 26 个国家中确定了 1100 份文件,其中超过 2/3 的文件在已出版的专题著作中被引用。从相关文献和口头交流中获得的可靠证据证实,在另外 28 个国家也在使用牙科治疗师。33 个国家是英联邦国家的成员,这表明从新西兰传播的一种机制。牙科治疗师的培训/教育时间长短不一,传统上是 2 年的大专后教育。在一些国家,治疗师和保健师的培训现在结合在一个为期 3 年的学术项目中。历史上,政府机构雇佣牙科治疗师为儿童提供服务,通常是在学校的项目中。一些国家的倡议允许经过额外培训的牙科治疗师为成人提供有限的护理。
证据表明,牙科治疗师以经济有效的方式为儿童提供有效、优质和安全的护理,并且在公众中以及在其使用得到确立的地方,通常都得到了公众和牙科专业人士的认可。