Is the dental profession ready for person-centred care?

Br Dent J

Faculty of Dentistry, Division of Oral Health and Society, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, H3A 1G1, Canada; School of Public Health, University of Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Published: July 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Health professions are increasingly focusing on person-centred care (PCC), but dentistry has not kept pace, still adhering to a biomedical approach.
  • A study in Quebec involved interviews with 11 general dental practitioners, revealing a lack of interest in understanding patients' personal stories and a limited willingness to share decision-making, particularly for high-value procedures.
  • The findings suggest that dentists view their craft as a sacred art, which hinders openness to PCC and highlights the need for the profession to re-evaluate its identity to better meet society's evolving expectations.

Article Abstract

Introduction In the last decades, health professions have progressively moved towards person-centredness. Dentistry, however, lags behind the other health professions and remains deeply anchored in a biomedical vision.Aims Our objective was thus to better understand how dentists perceived person-centred care (PCC) and identify the challenges they may face in implementing it.Methods We conducted qualitative descriptive research in the province of Quebec, Canada; it was based on in-depth interviews with 11 general dental practitioners working in private clinics.Results Thematic analyses reveal that dentists had little interest in understanding the life and stories of their patients. Furthermore, their openness to share decision-making was limited to procedures that they considered of relatively low value and less for procedures they considered of higher value, such as indirect restorations.Discussion We argue that dentists' reluctance to understanding and shared decision-making is rooted in the old-established identity of dentistry as an art. Dentists indeed considered the dental craft as sacred - an art form with unbreakable axioms that defined quality of care.Conclusion It is time for the dental profession to reflect on its ideological foundations and reconsider its identity. This reflection is crucial to respond to the needs of a changing society that is losing its confidence in the profession.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41415-020-1650-3DOI Listing

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