CODA standard 2–24 h—“replacement of teeth” dilemma: Unintended consequences and proposed solutions

Background The Commission on Dental Accreditation (CODA) was established in 1975 with the goal of serving the public and the dental profession by developing and implementing standards that guide and maintain the quality of dental educational programs. These standards are defined broadly around compe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of dental education 2023-06, Vol.87 (6), p.787-790
Hauptverfasser: Teich, Sorin T., McPherson, Karen R., Rizzante, Fabio A. P., Cayouette, Monica J.
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container_end_page 790
container_issue 6
container_start_page 787
container_title Journal of dental education
container_volume 87
creator Teich, Sorin T.
McPherson, Karen R.
Rizzante, Fabio A. P.
Cayouette, Monica J.
description Background The Commission on Dental Accreditation (CODA) was established in 1975 with the goal of serving the public and the dental profession by developing and implementing standards that guide and maintain the quality of dental educational programs. These standards are defined broadly around competencies reflective of an evidence‐based definition of general dentistry and that should be met by the new graduates to function as an entry level provider. Consequently, CODA “expects each school to develop specific competency definitions and assessment methods in the context of the broad scope of general dental practice”. CODA Standard 2–24 h was implemented a decade ago to address concerns that dental schools are not sufficiently proactive in incorporating implant‐related curricula and clinical competencies. When the standard was implemented, most patients already preferred dental implants over FPDs. This market trend, together with the prescriptive format of the standard, had the unintended consequence of creating pressure on programs that struggled to find enough patients who will chose FPDs as a treatment option. Discussion As a short term solution, we suggest a tooth replacement competency construct that has the potential to alleviate this burden. This solution incorporates principles of ethical decision making, patient‐centered care, and evidence‐based dentistry, without compromising educational aspects and competency development. For the longer term, we suggested to revise and rephrase the standard so that it will be clinically‐centered rather than focused on technical tools that may evolve, change, or disappear as a result of technological progress and other market trends. This, in turn, will be conducive to fulfill the intent of Standard 2–24 to allow the schools to identify “competencies that will be included in the curriculum based on the school's goals, resources, accepted general practitioner responsibilities and other influencing factors.”
doi_str_mv 10.1002/jdd.13196
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects accreditation < professional interest
evidence‐based dentistry < professional interest
implantology < clinical skills/topics
patient‐centered care < patient affairs
predental < education
prosthodontics < clinical skills/topics
title CODA standard 2–24 h—“replacement of teeth” dilemma: Unintended consequences and proposed solutions
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