Community Dental Health
- Cover Date:
- September 2014
- Print ISSN:
- 0265 539X
- Vol:
- 31
- Issue:
- 3
Evaluation of a capacity building clinical educational model for oral health clinicians treating very young children
Community Dental Health (2014) 31, 176–182 Received 29 January 2014; Accepted 26 March 2014
© BASCD 2014 doi:10.1922/CDH_3379Martin07
Evaluation of a capacity building clinical educational model for oral health clinicians treating very young children
Objective: There are significant levels of dental caries in Australian school-aged children, with children aged five years having a mean dmft of 1.3. It has also been identified that, in general, oral health clinicians lack confidence to treat very young children and this study aimed to increase capacity of public sector oral health clinicians to treat preschool children. Basic research design: An educational program was developed, implemented and evaluated for its capability to increase the confidence and knowledge of oral health clinicians and dental assistants in providing oral care for children aged 12 months to 5 years. Results: In 2011 and 2012, the course was delivered to 36 clinicians (22 dentists, 12 dental therapists, and two oral health therapists) and showed increases in their confidence and knowledge for participants when providing dental procedures to preschool children. Conclusions: The educational program that was developed and implemented has met its objective of increasing the knowledge and confidence of practicing oral health clinicians and dental assistants in the management of preschool children. Strategies to further enhance the outcomes of this educational program have been proposed.
Key words: education, professional, dental, postgraduate, oral health, child, preschool
- Article Price
- £15.00
- Institution Article Price
- £0.00
- Page Start
- 176
- Page End
- 182
- Authors
- J.M. Martin, K.A. O’Halloran, J.A. Butcher, M.S. Hopcraft, T.S. Arnold-Smith, H. Calache
Articles from this issue
- Title
- Pg. Start
- Pg. End
- Experience of racism and tooth brushing among pregnant Aboriginal Australians: exploring psychosocial mediators
- 145
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- Dietary intake of calcium, vitamins A and E and bleeding on probing in Sri Lankan preschoolers
- 153
- 157
- Type II diabetes and oral health: perceptions among adults with diabetes and oral/health care providers in Ghana
- 158
- 162
- Access, literacy and behavioural correlates of poor self-rated oral health amongst an Indigenous South Australian population
- 167
- 171
- Evaluation of a capacity building clinical educational model for oral health clinicians treating very young children
- 176
- 182
- The significance of motivation in periodontal treatment: The influence of adult patients’ motivation on the clinical periodontal status
- 183
- 187