Yamalik Nermin, Ensaldo-Carrasco Eduardo, Cavalle Edoardo, Kell Kathyrn
Department of Periodontology, Faculty of Dentistry, University of Hacettepe, Ankara, Turkey.
Int Dent J. 2014 Jun;64(3):117-26. doi: 10.1111/idj.12117.
A range of factors needs to be taken into account for an ideal oral health workforce plan. The figures related to dentists, specialists, auxiliaries, practice patterns, undergraduate and continuing dental education, laws/regulations, the attitudes of oral health-care providers and the general trends affecting the practice patterns, work conditions and preferences of oral health-care providers are among such determinants. Thus, the aim of the present study was to gather such information from a sample of World Dental Federation (FDI) member countries with different characteristics.
A cross-sectional survey study was carried out among a sample of FDI member countries between March 2, 2012 and March 27, 2012. A questionnaire was developed addressing some main determinants of oral health workforce, such as its structure, involvement of the public/private sector to provide oral health-care services, specialty services, dental schools, trends in workforce and compliance with oral health needs, and a descriptive analysis was performed. The countries were classified as developed and developing countries and Mann-Whitney U-tests and chi-square tests were used to identify potential significant differences (P > 0.05) between developed and developing countries. All data were processed in SPSS v.19.
In the18 questionnaires processed, the median number of dentists (P = 0.005), dental practices (P = 0.002), hygienists (P = 0.005), technicians (P = 0.013) and graduates per year (P = 0.037) was higher in developed countries. Only 12.5% of developed and 22.2% of developing countries reported having optimal number of graduates per year. It was noted that 66.7% of developing countries had more regions lacking enough dentists to meet the demand (P = 0.050) and 77.8% lacked the necessary specialist care (P = 0.015). Although developing countries reported mostly an oversupply of dentists, regardless of the level of development most countries did not report an oversupply of specialists. Most developed countries did not feel that their regulations (87.5%) complied with the needs and demands of the population and most developing countries did not feel that their undergraduate dental education (62.5%) complied. Migrating to other countries was a trend seen in developing countries, while, despite increased numbers of dentists, underserved areas and communities were reported.
The cross-sectional survey study suggests that figures related to optimum or ideal oral health workforce and fair distribution of the available workforce does not seem to be achieved in many parts of the world. Further attention also needs to be dedicated to general trends that have the capacity to affect future oral health workforce.
制定理想的口腔卫生人力计划需要考虑一系列因素。这些决定因素包括与牙医、专科医生、辅助人员、执业模式、本科及继续牙科教育、法律法规、口腔卫生保健提供者的态度以及影响口腔卫生保健提供者执业模式、工作条件和偏好的总体趋势等相关的数据。因此,本研究的目的是从具有不同特征的世界牙科联盟(FDI)成员国样本中收集此类信息。
2012年3月2日至2012年3月27日期间,在FDI成员国样本中开展了一项横断面调查研究。设计了一份问卷,涉及口腔卫生人力的一些主要决定因素,如结构、公共/私营部门参与提供口腔卫生保健服务的情况、专科服务、牙科学院、人力趋势以及满足口腔卫生需求的情况,并进行了描述性分析。将这些国家分为发达国家和发展中国家,采用曼-惠特尼U检验和卡方检验来确定发达国家和发展中国家之间潜在的显著差异(P>0.05)。所有数据均在SPSS v.19中进行处理。
在处理的18份问卷中,发达国家的牙医(P = 0.005)、牙科诊所(P = 0.002)、口腔保健员(P = 0.005)、技术人员(P = 0.013)以及每年的毕业生数量(P = 0.037)中位数更高。只有12.5%的发达国家和22.2%的发展中国家报告每年的毕业生数量最优。值得注意的是,66.7%的发展中国家有更多地区缺乏足够的牙医来满足需求(P = 0.050),77.8%的发展中国家缺乏必要的专科护理(P = 0.015)。尽管发展中国家大多报告牙医供应过剩,但无论发展水平如何,大多数国家都未报告专科医生供应过剩。大多数发达国家认为其法规(87.5%)不符合民众的需求,大多数发展中国家认为其本科牙科教育(62.5%)不符合需求。向其他国家迁移是发展中国家出现的一种趋势,同时,尽管牙医数量增加,但仍有报告称存在服务不足的地区和社区。
横断面调查研究表明,在世界许多地区似乎未实现与最佳或理想口腔卫生人力相关的数据以及现有人力的公平分配。还需要进一步关注有能力影响未来口腔卫生人力的总体趋势。