2008
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0579.2007.00480.x
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Evidence‐based care and the curriculum

Abstract: An evidence‐based (EB) approach has been a significant driver in reforming healthcare over the past two decades. This change has extended across a broad range of health professions, including oral healthcare. A key element in achieving an EB approach to oral healthcare is educating our practitioners, both current and future. This involves providing opportunities integrated within simulated and actual clinical settings for practitioners to learn and apply the principles and processes of evidence‐based oral heal… Show more

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Cited by 39 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…As healthcare providers, it is important that physicians and dentists offer the best possible care for their patients. This requires not only a sound educational base but also a good source of current best evidence to support their treatment recommendations (1). However, decisions made in healthcare are generally not made as a result of good evidence (2).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As healthcare providers, it is important that physicians and dentists offer the best possible care for their patients. This requires not only a sound educational base but also a good source of current best evidence to support their treatment recommendations (1). However, decisions made in healthcare are generally not made as a result of good evidence (2).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A recent expert review suggests that additional research on patient-reported outcomes is needed to advance evidence-based oral health care. 16 This research can be guided by the scientific principles underlying PRO development and evaluation. In this sense, PROs are no different from any other measure that is used as an endpoint in a clinical trial-without a strong theory supporting the importance of the endpoint in a particular program and without evidence that a measure is reliable, valid, and sensitive to treatment effects, the measure may not perform well in a trial.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The advancement of genomic technologies into the clinical setting and as an adjunct for clinical decision making sets the stage for personalized dental medicine (Winning et al , 2008). Personalized dentistry may be viewed as dental clinical decision making based on collective analysis of each individual’s unique clinical, genetic, genomic, behavioral, and environmental information (Ginsburg and Willard, 2009).…”
Section: Application Of Genomics To Oral Diseasesmentioning
confidence: 99%