Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries

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Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries. / Fiehn, Nils-Erik; Christensen, Lisa Bøge.

In: European Journal of Dental Education, Vol. 20, No. 1, 2016, p. 26-31.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fiehn, N-E & Christensen, LB 2016, 'Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries', European Journal of Dental Education, vol. 20, no. 1, pp. 26-31. https://doi.org/10.1111/eje.12136

APA

Fiehn, N-E., & Christensen, L. B. (2016). Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries. European Journal of Dental Education, 20(1), 26-31. https://doi.org/10.1111/eje.12136

Vancouver

Fiehn N-E, Christensen LB. Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries. European Journal of Dental Education. 2016;20(1):26-31. https://doi.org/10.1111/eje.12136

Author

Fiehn, Nils-Erik ; Christensen, Lisa Bøge. / Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries. In: European Journal of Dental Education. 2016 ; Vol. 20, No. 1. pp. 26-31.

Bibtex

@article{9f70f8f085ca40a5ba64c44e9d589bd4,
title = "Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries",
abstract = "INTRODUCTION:Lifestyle and general diseases are important for the development of periodontitis and other diseases in the oral cavity. Therefore, knowledge on lifestyle factors must be part of the dental curriculum. However, a search for information in the literature databases gave meagre results. The aim of this study was to describe education of lifestyle in relation to diseases in the oral cavity with focus on periodontitis and to elucidate how education is practiced and reflected in dental education in the Nordic countries.MATERIALS AND METHODS:A questionnaire, which consisted of 18 questions, was sent to the chairs of the departments of periodontology in the Nordic countries. The questions concerned extent, curriculum structure, educational method, content, assessment and evaluation of the education.RESULTS:Education on lifestyle factors took place at all dental schools, but the extent, content and placement in the curriculum varied. In some schools, more than 10 lessons were scheduled; two schools had only 3-5 lessons. The education of lifestyle factors was prioritised highest in the departments of periodontology followed by cariology and general health. Despite differences in the content across the dental schools, there were also similarities. So, at all schools smoking, medication, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes type 2 had a high priority. Education of other factors such as alcohol, psychological stress, oral hygiene habits, hypotension and obesity varied.CONCLUSION:Despite the general view that understanding of odontology is considered to be rather homogenous in the Nordic countries, the education varies across the dental schools. This variation may inspire dental educators in the future planning dental curricula.",
author = "Nils-Erik Fiehn and Christensen, {Lisa B{\o}ge}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1111/eje.12136",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
pages = "26--31",
journal = "European Journal of Dental Education",
issn = "1396-5883",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Examination of lifestyle factors and diseases in teaching periodontology in dental education in the Nordic countries

AU - Fiehn, Nils-Erik

AU - Christensen, Lisa Bøge

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - INTRODUCTION:Lifestyle and general diseases are important for the development of periodontitis and other diseases in the oral cavity. Therefore, knowledge on lifestyle factors must be part of the dental curriculum. However, a search for information in the literature databases gave meagre results. The aim of this study was to describe education of lifestyle in relation to diseases in the oral cavity with focus on periodontitis and to elucidate how education is practiced and reflected in dental education in the Nordic countries.MATERIALS AND METHODS:A questionnaire, which consisted of 18 questions, was sent to the chairs of the departments of periodontology in the Nordic countries. The questions concerned extent, curriculum structure, educational method, content, assessment and evaluation of the education.RESULTS:Education on lifestyle factors took place at all dental schools, but the extent, content and placement in the curriculum varied. In some schools, more than 10 lessons were scheduled; two schools had only 3-5 lessons. The education of lifestyle factors was prioritised highest in the departments of periodontology followed by cariology and general health. Despite differences in the content across the dental schools, there were also similarities. So, at all schools smoking, medication, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes type 2 had a high priority. Education of other factors such as alcohol, psychological stress, oral hygiene habits, hypotension and obesity varied.CONCLUSION:Despite the general view that understanding of odontology is considered to be rather homogenous in the Nordic countries, the education varies across the dental schools. This variation may inspire dental educators in the future planning dental curricula.

AB - INTRODUCTION:Lifestyle and general diseases are important for the development of periodontitis and other diseases in the oral cavity. Therefore, knowledge on lifestyle factors must be part of the dental curriculum. However, a search for information in the literature databases gave meagre results. The aim of this study was to describe education of lifestyle in relation to diseases in the oral cavity with focus on periodontitis and to elucidate how education is practiced and reflected in dental education in the Nordic countries.MATERIALS AND METHODS:A questionnaire, which consisted of 18 questions, was sent to the chairs of the departments of periodontology in the Nordic countries. The questions concerned extent, curriculum structure, educational method, content, assessment and evaluation of the education.RESULTS:Education on lifestyle factors took place at all dental schools, but the extent, content and placement in the curriculum varied. In some schools, more than 10 lessons were scheduled; two schools had only 3-5 lessons. The education of lifestyle factors was prioritised highest in the departments of periodontology followed by cariology and general health. Despite differences in the content across the dental schools, there were also similarities. So, at all schools smoking, medication, cardiovascular diseases and diabetes type 2 had a high priority. Education of other factors such as alcohol, psychological stress, oral hygiene habits, hypotension and obesity varied.CONCLUSION:Despite the general view that understanding of odontology is considered to be rather homogenous in the Nordic countries, the education varies across the dental schools. This variation may inspire dental educators in the future planning dental curricula.

U2 - 10.1111/eje.12136

DO - 10.1111/eje.12136

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25684550

VL - 20

SP - 26

EP - 31

JO - European Journal of Dental Education

JF - European Journal of Dental Education

SN - 1396-5883

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 128382842