1.Construction of the evaluation index system for nursing quality management in outpatient dental clinics based on the structure-process-outcome model.
Jingyi WEI ; Fan LIU ; Chunxia YANG ; Jingjun WANG ; Yonghong MA ; Jinrong YANG ; Jingying XIE ; Lisheng XU
West China Journal of Stomatology 2025;43(6):860-870
OBJECTIVES:
This study aimed to construct an evaluation index system for nursing quality management in outpatient dental clinics based on the structure-process-outcome model and provide an objective standard for the evaluation of nursing quality in outpatient dental clinics.
METHODS:
Through literature review, multi-subject interviews, and expert meetings, the first draft of the evaluation index for nursing quality management in outpatient dental clinics was formulated. The Delphi method was adopted to select and invite 15 experts in the fields of hospital infection management, nursing management, and specialized oral care from across the country to modify the first draft.
RESULTS:
The positive coefficients of the experts in the two rounds of consultation were 86.7% and 92.3%, respectively. The total authority coefficients of the experts were 0.791 and 0.717, respectively. The mean scores of the importance and feasibility of the third-level indices in the two rounds of consultation were all ≥4.333; the coefficients of variation were all ≤0.150; and the Kendall's coordination coefficients were 0.308 and 0.184 respectively, with P<0.05 for all. These results indicated that the experts were motivated to participate in this study. They recognized the importance and feasibility of the overall items in this index system, and their opinions were relatively consistent. Finally, an evaluation index system, which included 3 first-level indices, 7 second-level indices, 22 third-level indices, and 69 index connotations, for nursing quality management in outpatient dental clinics was determined. The weights of the three first-level indicators were all 0.333. Patient satisfaction (0.076, outcome dimension), hand hygiene (0.061, outcome dimension), chair care ratio (0.057, structural dimension), and turnover rate (0.057, structural dimension) were the top tertiary indicators in terms of portfolio weight.
CONCLUSIONS
The construction method of the evaluation index system for nursing quality management in outpatient dental clinics is scientific and reliable. It can provide a reference for the evaluation of the management level of nursing quality in outpatient dental clinics and promote the continuous improvement of nursing quality in outpatient dental clinics.
Humans
;
Dental Clinics
;
Delphi Technique
2.Analysis of dental clinic and dental chair distribution in Sichuan.
Yan ZHENG ; Liuqing YAN ; Chengge HUA ; Xinhua LIANG ; Zheng YANG
West China Journal of Stomatology 2023;41(3):333-340
OBJECTIVES:
To thoroughly understand the current dental chair equipment status of dental clinics in Sichuan Province and provide a reference for administrative departments.
METHODS:
Data were collected from a health administrative department and a regional social development yearbook. The number of existing dental clinics and dental chairs in Sichuan Province was investigated.
RESULTS:
In Sichuan Province, 7 103 dental clinics were determined to be equipped with 21 760 dental chairs. The Gini coefficients of per capita dental clinics in the province were 0.50, 0.22, and 0.06, and the Gini coefficients of per capita dental chairs were 0.68, 0.31, and 0.15; these coefficients had the same distribution as that reflected by the Lorenz curve. In consideration of geographic distribution, the Theil index for the distribution of dental clinics and dental chairs among cities and states were 0.690 7 and 0.822 3, respectively. The overall Theil index va-lues for the distribution of dental clinics and dental chairs in the province were 0.902 4 and 1.079 4, respectively. The difference in the distribution of dental clinics and dental chairs among cities and states in the province contributed 0.765 4 and 0.761 8 to the total difference, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS
The allocation of oral health resources in Sichuan Pro-vince is relatively equitable in terms of population and economic distribution but uneven in geographical distribution.
Dental Clinics
;
Oral Health
;
China
3.Diagnostic strategies for diseases with fever in dental clinics.
Jian YUAN ; Chuanxia LIU ; Zaiye LI ; Qianming CHEN
Journal of Zhejiang University. Science. B 2023;24(4):352-358
Fever is an increase in body temperature beyond the normal range, acting as a protective inflammatory mechanism. This article summarizes diseases with fever encountered in dental clinics, including what is known about pyrexia in coronavirus infection, and further proposes a "six steps in one" identification and analysis strategy to guide the clinical work of stomatology.
Humans
;
Dental Clinics
;
Fever/diagnosis*
;
Coronavirus Infections
4.A Clinical Audit and Impact of Interventions on Antibiotic Prescribing Practices at a Public Dental Primary Care Clinic
Sarah Wan-Lin Lim ; Diana Brennai Awan ; Thaddius Herman Maling
Archives of Orofacial Sciences 2022;17(1):31-45
ABSTRACT
Inappropriate antibiotic prescribing in dentistry has been widely reported but local studies are scarce.
We aimed to evaluate antibiotic prescribing practices among dental officers in a public dental primary
care clinic against current guidelines: specifically assessing the number, appropriateness, accuracy
of prescriptions, type of antibiotics prescribed and repeated prescribing of the same type of antibiotics
within a specific duration. A retrospective audit consisting of two cycles (1st cycle: July to September
2018, 2nd cycle: July to September 2019) was carried out by manually collecting relevant data of
patients (aged 18 and above) who were prescribed antibiotics from carbon copies of prescription
books. Between each cycle, various interventions such as education through a continuous professional
development (CPD) session, presentation of preliminary findings and making guidelines more accessible
to dental officers were implemented. When the 1st and 2nd cycles were compared, the number of
antibiotic prescriptions issued reduced from 194 to 136 (–30.0%) whereas the percentage of appropriate
prescriptions increased slightly by 4.1%. Inaccurate prescriptions in terms of dosage and duration
decreased (–0.5% and –13.7%, respectively) whilst drug form and frequency of intake increased (+15.7%
and +0.7%, respectively). Repeated prescribing of the same antibiotics by the same officer within a
period of ≤6 weeks no longer occurred. Amoxicillin and metronidazole were most commonly prescribed
in both cycles. Overall, the antibiotic prescribing practices did not closely adhere to current guidelines.
However, clinical audit in conjunction with targeted interventions resulted in improvement in the
antibiotic prescribing patterns. Thus, further intervention and re-audit is necessary.
Anti-Bacterial Agents--administration &
;
dosage
;
Dental Clinics
;
Clinical Audit
5.The Optimum Duration of Flushing Dental Unit Waterlines for Microbial Removal
John Chong Keat Hon ; Siti Noor Adnalizawati Adnan ; Nur Aqilah Ismail
Archives of Orofacial Sciences 2021;16(1):13-23
ABSTRACT
This study aims to evaluate the optimum duration of flushing dental unit waterlines (DUWLs) in
Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia (USIM) dental polyclinics for removal of heterotrophic bacteria. Water
samples were obtained from triple air syringes at each dental chair from oral surgery clinic, outpatient
clinic and polyclinic 17 at Faculty of Dentistry, USIM after 16 and 64 hours of not operating the dental
units as baseline samples. This is followed by sampling after continuous flushing at 30 seconds, 1 minute,
2 minutes and 3 minutes of flushing duration. The levels of heterotrophic plate count (HPC) for each
flushing duration were determined by quantification of colony forming units (CFUs) after cultivation
of samples on plate count agar (PCA), R2A agar and 5% sheep blood agar (SBA). Statistically, there
was no significant reduction in CFUs of HPC for all flushing duration compared to baseline (P > 0.05)
with the most notable HPC reducing level after 1 minute and 3 minutes of flushing DUWLs. However,
HPC level at USIM dental clinics is still exceeding the recommendation by Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) which should be less than 500 CFU/mL. The existing method of controlling
DUWLs contamination in USIM dental clinics is only by flushing DUWLs 1 minute every morning prior
to dental treatment as recommended by Malaysian Dental Council (MDC) without the use of chemical
germicides. Thus, the flushing method alone is not reliable to reduce the number of microorganisms in
the DUWLs.
Dental Clinics
;
Biofilms
6.The treatment of an edentulous patient with conventional complete denture and CAD/CAM complete denture
The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics 2020;58(1):42-49
In patients with fully edentulous jaw, treatment of complete dentures should be carried out in many stages when following the conventional methods. Therefore there were disadvantages such as multiple visits to dental clinic is inevitable. In addition, errors caused by polymerization shrinkage, which happens during the fabrication of denture, and difficulties in reproduction of damaged or lost denture were considered as disadvantages. But nowadays, computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing (CAD/CAM) system is widely used in dentistry and it has begun to expand its spectrum in manufacturing complete dentures. Using CAD/CAM system to fabricate complete dentures can reduce the number of patient's visit and clinical chair time, since taking impression, recording jaw relation, and selection of artificial teeth are performed at the same time during the first visit, and delivering of dentures during the second visit is possible. In addition, because 3D-Printing technology is used, errors by polymerization shrinkage can be reduced. Among the companies that fabricate complete dentures using CAD/CAM system, DENTCA CAD/CAM denture (DENTCA Inc., Los Angeles, CA, USA) is the most commercialized company. In this case, we treated patients of complete dentures using conventional complete denture method and DENTCA CAD/CAM denture system in the same patient. We would like to report this case because we have achieved good results not only in functional aspects of pronunciation, chewing, and swallowing but also in aesthetic aspects.
Computer-Aided Design
;
Deglutition
;
Dental Clinics
;
Dentistry
;
Denture, Complete
;
Dentures
;
Humans
;
Jaw
;
Jaw, Edentulous
;
Mastication
;
Methods
;
Polymerization
;
Polymers
;
Reproduction
;
Tooth, Artificial
7.The biofilm removal effect of MnO₂-diatom microbubbler from the dental prosthetic surfaces: In vitro study
Eun Hyuk LEE ; Yongbeom SEO ; Ho Bum KWON ; Young Jun YIM ; Hyunjoon KONG ; Myung Joo KIM
The Journal of Korean Academy of Prosthodontics 2020;58(1):14-22
PURPOSE: The aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of MnO₂-diatom microbubbler (DM) on the surface of prosthetic materials as a mouthwash by comparing the biofilm removal effect with those previously used as a mouthwash in dental clinic.MATERIALS AND METHODS: DM was fabricated by doping manganese dioxide nanosheets to the diatom cylinder surface. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used to observe the morphology of DM and to analyze the composition of doped MnO₂. Stereomicroscope was used to observe the reaction of DM in 3% hydrogen peroxide. Non-precious metal alloys, zirconia and resin specimens were prepared to evaluate the effect of biofilm removal on the surface of prosthetic materials. And then Streptococcus mutans and Porphyromonas gingivalis biofilms were formed on the specimens. When 3% hydrogen peroxide solution and DM were treated on the biofilms, the decontamination effect was compared with chlorhexidine gluconate and 3% hydrogen peroxide solution by crystal violet staining.RESULTS: Manganese dioxide was found on the surface of the diatom cylinder, and it was found to produce bubble of oxygen gas when added to 3% hydrogen peroxide. For all materials used in the experiments, biofilms of the DM-treated groups got effectively removed compared to the groups used with chlorhexidine gluconate or 3% hydrogen peroxide alone.CONCLUSION: MnO₂-diatom microbubbler can remove bacterial membranes on the surface of prosthetic materials more effectively than conventional mouthwashes.
Alloys
;
Biofilms
;
Chlorhexidine
;
Decontamination
;
Dental Clinics
;
Dental Plaque
;
Diatoms
;
Gentian Violet
;
Hydrogen Peroxide
;
In Vitro Techniques
;
Manganese
;
Membranes
;
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
;
Mouthwashes
;
Oral Hygiene
;
Oxygen
;
Porphyromonas gingivalis
;
Streptococcus mutans
8.Effects of the 4C Core Competencies on Work Ability among Dental Hygienists
Journal of Dental Hygiene Science 2019;19(4):220-227
BACKGROUND: This descriptive study aimed to examine the relationship between the 4C core competencies and work ability among dental hygienists.METHODS: From November 2018 to January 2019, data were collected-from 190 dental hygienists workong in dental clinics in Busan, Ulsan, and Gyeongsangnam province using structured questionnaires. For the general characteristics of the dental hygienists, frequency and percentage were calculated, and the level of the 4C core competencies and work ability of dental hygienists was calculated using means and standard deviations. A multiple regression analysis was conducted to analyze the effects of the 4C core competencies on work ability.RESULTS: The mean scores for the 4C core competency levels of the dental hygienists were as follows: communication ability 3.34, critical thinking ability 3.41, creative problem-solving 3.40, and collaborative self-efficacy 3.27. Meanwhile the mean score for work ability level was 3.65. The predictive factors influencing work ability were communication ability and cooperative self-efficacy (p<0.001), and the sub-factors of critical thinking ability that affect work ability were sound conferences (p<0.01), intellectual fairness (p<0.05), intellectual enthusiasm (p<0.05), and self-confidence (p<0.001). Finally, the sub-factors of creative problem-solving ability that affect work ability were planning and execution (p<0.01) and performance evaluation (p<0.05).CONCLUSION: The current study showed that education programs covering the core competencies of dental hygienists, rather than the existing theoretical education program, should be developed and implemented to enhance 4C core competencies that affect work ability.
Busan
;
Communication
;
Congresses as Topic
;
Dental Clinics
;
Dental Hygienists
;
Education
;
Humans
;
Problem Solving
;
Thinking
;
Ulsan
9.Elucidating the relationship of gingivitis and dental calculus with the periodontal health of 12-year-old children
Jung Ha LEE ; Se Yeon KIM ; Ji Soo KIM ; Min Ji BYON ; Eun Joo JUN ; Han Na KIM ; Jin Bom KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Oral Health 2019;43(4):196-203
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to investigate factors related to the periodontal health of 12-year-old children.METHODS: In 2015, the Korean Children's Oral Health Survey from the Ministry of Health & Social Welfare conducted a nationwide representative sample comprised of 23,702 12-year-old children. The calibration-trained dentists examined the gingivitis and dental calculus of the children taking into consideration of the Löe and Silness gingival index to diagnose gingivitis with a modified gingivitis scale. We used questionnaires to collect data from the children on dental treatments, the experience of dental pain and gingival bleeding, self-perceived oral health, and oral health behaviors. Data were analyzed using a complex samples Chi-square test, general linear model, and logistic regression. Significance was determined at P < 0.05.RESULTS: The prevalence of gingivitis was higher among males (OR 1.57), among children with poor perception (OR 1.19), dental calculus (OR 3.68), or gingival bleeding experience (OR 2.00), and among children not using dental floss (OR 1.69) or tongue cleaner (OR 1.90). The prevalence of dental calculus was higher among children with gingivitis (OR 3.82) and among children who had not visited a dental clinic in the preceding year (OR 1.31). However, dental calculus was lower among children with a higher frequency of daily toothbrushing (OR 0.75), intake of cariogenic foods (OR 0.90), or a higher DMFT index (OR 0.91).CONCLUSIONS: Children with dental calculus and gingival bleeding who did not visit a dental clinic in the preceding year also had a higher prevalence of gingivitis and dental calculus. The prevalence of children's dental calculus was lower among children with a high frequency of daily toothbrushing.
Child
;
Dental Calculus
;
Dental Clinics
;
Dental Devices, Home Care
;
Dentists
;
Gingivitis
;
Hemorrhage
;
Humans
;
Linear Models
;
Logistic Models
;
Male
;
Oral Health
;
Periodontal Index
;
Prevalence
;
Social Welfare
;
Tongue
;
Toothbrushing
10.Effect of Developmental Disorders of Maxillary First Molars on Orofacial Morphology
Soyoung PARK ; Taesung JEONG ; Jiyeon KIM ; Shin KIM
Journal of Korean Academy of Pediatric Dentistry 2019;46(2):209-218
This study was aimed to evaluate orofacial morphologies on the cases of developmental disorders of maxillary first molars.Panoramic radiographs, lateral cephalographs, and clinical photos of 2983 children who attended the Pediatric Dental Clinic of Pusan National University Dental Hospital from 2006 to August 2017 were assessed retrospectively. 34 patients were selected whose maxillary first molars were missed or developmentally delayed unilaterally or bilaterally. Demirjian' s method was used for estimating dental age, then which was compared to chronologic age of children. Parameters expressing skeletal and dentoalveolar disharmony were checked and compared with control. Additionally, occlusion relationship was evaluated.Maxillary dental age was significantly delayed compared to chronologic age. Several parameters which show skeletal open-bite tendency and skeletal class III malocclusion with maxillary retrusion were statistically significant. Anterior crossbite and edge-bite were expected in most of these cases, but compensation by occlusion and soft tissue was also verified which might mask skeletal class III tendency.Congenital missed or developmentally delayed maxillary first molars might be related with declined growth of maxilla. If developmental disorders of maxillary first molars were verified during clinical examination, careful monitoring of orofacial growth was necessary during puberty and timed orthopedic and orthodontic intervention were considered.
Adolescent
;
Busan
;
Child
;
Compensation and Redress
;
Dental Clinics
;
Humans
;
Malocclusion
;
Masks
;
Maxilla
;
Methods
;
Molar
;
Orthopedics
;
Puberty
;
Retrognathia
;
Retrospective Studies


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