Affiliations 

  • 1 Dr. Ahmad is a Ph.D. student in Special Needs Dentistry, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne and Lecturer, Faculty of Dentistry, Universiti Teknologi MARA Malaysia; Dr. Razak is Professor of Community Dentistry and Vice Chancellor, Vinayaka Missions International University College, Malaysia; and Dr. Borromeo is Associate Professor and Course Convener for Special Needs Dentistry, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne
  • 2 Dr. Ahmad is a Ph.D. student in Special Needs Dentistry, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne and Lecturer, Faculty of Dentistry, Universiti Teknologi MARA Malaysia; Dr. Razak is Professor of Community Dentistry and Vice Chancellor, Vinayaka Missions International University College, Malaysia; and Dr. Borromeo is Associate Professor and Course Convener for Special Needs Dentistry, Melbourne Dental School, University of Melbourne. borromeo@unimelb.edu.au
J Dent Educ, 2014 Aug;78(8):1154-61.
PMID: 25086148

Abstract

Meeting the oral health care needs of the growing population of people with special health care needs (SHCN) starts with dental students' acquisition of sound knowledge and development of clinical competence at the predoctoral level. The aim of this study was to review the level of undergraduate education in Special Needs Dentistry (SND) in Malaysian and Australian dental schools. The deans of all six Malaysian public dental schools and eight of nine Australian dental schools participated in a postal survey on current undergraduate didactic and clinical training in SND at their institutions. The results showed the number of dental schools in Malaysia with teaching in SND as a specific discipline was relatively low compared to that of Australia. However, a high percentage of Malaysian and Australian dental schools reported incorporating teaching of SND into pediatric dentistry (83.3 percent vs. 75 percent), oral medicine/oral pathology (66.7 percent vs. 75 percent), and oral surgery (66.7 percent vs. 25 percent). Most respondents said their school delivered SND clinical training in dental school clinics, hospital-based settings, and residential aged care facilities. Respondents in both countries viewed lack of faculty expertise as the greatest barrier to providing SND education. The study provides valuable information that can direct SND curriculum development in the two countries.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.