Affiliation:
1. General Practice Residency Program University of California San Francisco California USA
2. Department of Periodontics and Oral Medicine School of Dentistry University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA
3. Department of Psychology College of Literature Science & Arts University of Michigan Ann Arbor Michigan USA
Abstract
AbstractObjectivesResearch shows that adults who were Deaf or Hard of Hearing (HoH) had poorer oral health than adults who did not belong to this community. The objectives were to assess dentists’ education, knowledge, attitudes, and professional behavior related to treating patients from the Deaf or HoH community and the relationships between these constructs.MethodsA total of 207 members of the American Dental Association and the Michigan Dental Association responded to a mailed or web‐based survey concerning their education, knowledge, attitudes, and professional behavior related to treating patients from the Deaf or HoH community.ResultsOn average, the respondents disagreed that they were well educated in classroom‐based, clinical, or community‐based dental school settings (five‐point answer scale with 1 = disagree strongly; mean = 2.29/2.27/2.35) or by their professional organization (mean = 2.00) about treating Deaf or HoH patients. However, the more recently the respondents had graduated from dental school, the better they described their education about this topic (r = 0.29; p < 0.001). Additionally, 45.9% agreed/strongly agreed that they would like to attend a continuing education course about this topic; 68.9% agreed/agreed strongly that negative consequences for patients’ general health can occur; and 61.1% that patients cannot be well educated about oral hygiene if Deaf or HoH patients do not have appropriate interpretive support in dental offices. The better dentists were educated about this topic, the more knowledge they had (r = 0.50; p < 0.001). On average, the respondents agreed more strongly that they were comfortable treating adult patients who communicated orally than patients using American Sign Language (4.02 vs. 3.25; p < 0.001).ConclusionsThese findings show that efforts are needed to improve dental school and continuing education curricula about dental treatment for Deaf and HoH patients. The more recently the respondents had graduated, the more positively they described their education. Increased dental school and continuing education efforts are still urgently needed.
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