It's not just about the money: recruitment and retention of clinical staff in general dental practice - part 1: dentists.

Prim Dent J

Jessica A. Holloway MChD/BChD, MPH, PhD, FHEA Specialty Registrar in Dental Public Health, Public Health Wales, Cardiff, UK.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Recruitment and retention issues among dentists in the UK are negatively impacting NHS dental services and could lead to worse access to care and increased oral health inequalities.
  • A literature review was conducted to identify factors influencing job satisfaction and dissatisfaction among dental professionals, particularly focusing on the results from 22 relevant articles.
  • Key findings indicate that target-driven contracts, time pressures, lack of quality equipment, and unfair pay contribute significantly to dentist dissatisfaction, suggesting that reforms in dental contracts are needed to improve job satisfaction and workforce stability.

Article Abstract

Increasing difficulties in recruitment and retention of dentists and dental care professionals in general dental practice in the UK is affecting delivery of NHS dental services. Reports of dissatisfaction among the general dental practice workforce indicate there is a significant risk to the future dental workforce supply which will affect access to dental care and worsen oral health inequalities. Understanding the factors related to job satisfaction and dissatisfaction of dental professionals would be useful in managing recruitment and retention issues and ensure a dental workforce exists which is able to meet the needs of the population. The aim of this literature review was to identify factors which contribute to job satisfaction and dissatisfaction of clinical staff in general dental practice. Database searching was conducted systematically through PubMed/Medline, Scopus, Ovid, and the National Grey Literature Collection. Part 1 of this two-part series discusses the factors relating to dentists. Twenty-two relevant articles were identified, which were qualitatively analysed using Herzberg's motivation-hygiene theory as an analysis tool. Target-driven and restrictive contractual arrangements are a major factor contributing to dissatisfaction of dentists, as well as time pressures, poor quality equipment, and unfair remuneration. Dental contract reform should aim to minimise factors contributing to dissatisfaction and increase factors which increase satisfaction, if sufficient numbers of dentists are to be persuaded to continue to provide state-funded dentistry.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/20501684241232212DOI Listing

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