Perceptions of mono-specialty examinations in restorative dentistry training pathways

2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-26
Author(s):  
Graeme Bryce ◽  
Deborah Bomfim ◽  
Ulpee Darbar

Specialty registrar training in restorative dentistry is intended to develop mono-specialty knowledge and clinical competence to ensure optimal treatment outcomes and improved quality of life in complex cases. There have been a number of changes to the training programme in recent years, with the introduction of structured curricula and increased emphasis on learning outcomes, assessed via mono-specialty examinations (MSEs). However, the views of trainers and trainees on these changes, the relevance of MSEs to training and their impact on development and future employment prospects are not clear.

2017 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Priebe ◽  
Eoin Golden ◽  
David Kingdon ◽  
Serif Omer ◽  
Sophie Walsh ◽  
...  

BackgroundAt least 100,000 patients with schizophrenia receive care from community mental health teams (CMHTs) in England. These patients have regular meetings with clinicians, who assess them, engage them in treatment and co-ordinate care. As these routine meetings are not commonly guided by research evidence, a new intervention, DIALOG, was previously designed to structure consultations. Using a hand-held computer, clinicians asked patients to rate their satisfaction with eight life domains and three treatment aspects, and to indicate whether or not additional help was needed in each area, with responses being graphically displayed and compared with previous ratings. In a European multicentre trial, the intervention improved patients’ quality of life over a 1-year period. The current programme builds on this research by further developing DIALOG in the UK.Research questions(1) How can the practical procedure of the intervention be improved, including the software used and the design of the user interface? (2) How can elements of resource-oriented interventions be incorporated into a clinician manual and training programme for a new, more extensive ‘DIALOG+’ intervention? (3) How effective and cost-effective is the new DIALOG+ intervention in improving treatment outcomes for patients with schizophrenia or a related disorder? (4) What are the views of patients and clinicians regarding the new DIALOG+ intervention?MethodsWe produced new software on a tablet computer for CMHTs in the NHS, informed by analysis of videos of DIALOG sessions from the original trial and six focus groups with 18 patients with psychosis. We developed the new ‘DIALOG+’ intervention in consultation with experts, incorporating principles of solution-focused therapy when responding to patients’ ratings and specifying the procedure in a manual and training programme for clinicians. We conducted an exploratory cluster randomised controlled trial with 49 clinicians and 179 patients with psychosis in East London NHS Foundation Trust, comparing DIALOG+ with an active control. Clinicians working as care co-ordinators in CMHTs (along with their patients) were cluster randomised 1 : 1 to either DIALOG+ or treatment as usual plus an active control, to prevent contamination. Intervention and control were to be administered monthly for 6 months, with data collected at baseline and at 3, 6 and 12 months following randomisation. The primary outcome was subjective quality of life as measured on the Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life; secondary outcomes were also measured. We also established the cost-effectiveness of the DIALOG intervention using data from the Client Service Receipt Inventory, which records patients’ retrospective reports of using health- and social-care services, including hospital services, outpatient services and medication, in the 3 months prior to each time point. Data were supplemented by the clinical notes in patients’ medical records to improve accuracy. We conducted an exploratory thematic analysis of 16 video-recorded DIALOG+ sessions and measured adherence in these videos using a specially developed adherence scale. We conducted focus groups with patients (n = 19) and clinicians (n = 19) about their experiences of the intervention, and conducted thematic analyses. We disseminated the findings and made the application (app), manual and training freely available, as well as producing a protocol for a definitive trial.ResultsPatients receiving the new intervention showed more favourable quality of life in the DIALOG+ group after 3 months (effect size: Cohen’sd = 0.34), after 6 months (Cohen’sd = 0.29) and after 12 months (Cohen’sd = 0.34). An analysis of video-recorded DIALOG+ sessions showed inconsistent implementation, with adherence to the intervention being a little over half of the possible score. Patients and clinicians from the DIALOG+ arm of the trial reported many positive experiences with the intervention, including better self-expression and improved efficiency of meetings. Difficulties reported with the intervention were addressed by further refining the DIALOG+ manual and training. Cost-effectiveness analyses found a 72% likelihood that the intervention both improved outcomes and saved costs.LimitationsThe research was conducted solely in urban east London, meaning that the results may not be broadly generalisable to other settings.Conclusions(1) Although services might consider adopting DIALOG+ based on the existing evidence, a definitive trial appears warranted; (2) applying DIALOG+ to patient groups with other mental disorders may be considered, and to groups with physical health problems; (3) a more flexible use with variable intervals might help to make the intervention even more acceptable and effective; (4) more process evaluation is required to identify what mechanisms precisely are involved in the improvements seen in the intervention group in the trial; and (5) what appears to make DIALOG+ effective is that it is not a separate treatment and not a technology that is administered by a specialist; rather, it changes and utilises the existing therapeutic relationship between patients and clinicians in CMHTs to initiate positive change, helping the patients to improve their quality of life.Future researchFuture studies should include a definitive trial on DIALOG+ and test the effectiveness of the intervention with other populations, such as people with depression.Trial registrationCurrent Controlled Trials ISRCTN34757603.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Programme Grants for Applied Research programme.


2006 ◽  
Vol 86 (7) ◽  
pp. 974-986 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diane F Borello-France ◽  
Halina M Zyczynski ◽  
Patricia A Downey ◽  
Christine R Rause ◽  
Joseph A Wister

AbstractBackground and Purpose. Pelvic-floor muscle (PFM) exercises are effective in reducing stress urinary incontinence (SUI), but few studies have investigated the effect of specific exercise variables on treatment outcomes. This study explored the effect of exercise position on treatment outcomes in women with SUI. Subjects and Methods. Forty-four women were randomly assigned to exercise in the supine position only or in both supine and upright positions. Bladder diary, pad test, urodynamic test, quality-of-life (Incontinence Impact Questionnaire [IIQ]), and PFM strength outcomes were obtained at baseline and after treatment. Results. Exercise position did not affect outcomes. After data from both groups were collapsed, statistically significant improvements with treatment were observed in bladder diary, IIQ, PFM strength, and urodynamic test results. Discussion and Conclusion. Exercise position did not differentially affect treatment outcomes. However, women in this study achieved a mean 67.9% reduction in the frequency of SUI episodes and improvements in other study outcomes. [Borello-France DF, Zyczynski HM, Downey PA, et al. Effect of pelvic-floor muscle exercise position on continence and quality-of-life outcomes in women with stress urinary incontinence. Phys Ther. 2006;86:974–986.]


2013 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 180
Author(s):  
Daniel Santa Mina ◽  
Andrew G. Matthew ◽  
John Trachtenberg ◽  
George Tomlinson ◽  
Crissa L. Guglietti ◽  
...  

Background: There are significant post-surgical reductions in healthrelatedquality of life (HRQOL) in prostate cancer (PCa) patientsundergoing radical prostatectomy (RP). Physical activity (PA) interventionshave improved treatment outcomes for PCa patients undergoingradiation and hormone therapy, but PA effects have notpreviously been examined in the RP setting. This study examinedthe relationship between preoperative PA levels and postoperativeHRQOL outcomes in PCa patients treated with RP.Methods: Sixty patients were interviewed regarding lifetime PAand completed preoperative (2 weeks prior to surgery) and postoperative(4 weeks after surgery) HRQOL questionnaires. Aerobicfitness testing was conducted on a subsample of 22 patients.Results: Higher levels of total past-year PA and occupational PAsignificantly correlated with lesser HRQOL declines from presurgeryto 4 weeks post-surgery (Beta = -0.364, p = 0.037 andBeta = -0.243, p = 0.089, respectively) in models adjusted forage, postoperative questionnaire completion date, Gleason scoreand education. Past-year occupational PA was highly positivelycorrelated with past-year total PA (r = 0.785, p < 0.001). Lifetimetotal PA was correlated with estimated VO2 max (r = 0.486,p = 0.026) in the 22 patients who were aerobically tested. Lifetimeand past-year PA volumes were not correlated with waist circumferenceor body mass index.Interpretation: Declines in HRQOL after RP may be reduced inpatients with higher preoperative levels of self-reported PA. Thesefindings require further study with larger samples to confirm results.If confirmed, findings suggest exercise preoperatively may improveHRQOL outcomes after RP.Contexte : Des réductions post-chirurgicales significatives dansla qualité de vie liée à la santé (QdVS) sont notées chez les patientsatteints d’un cancer de la prostate ayant subi une prostatectomieradicale (PR). La pratique d’activités physiques a amélioré lesrésultats du traitement chez les patients suivant une radiothérapieet un traitement hormonal, mais les effets de l’activité physiquen’ont jamais été mesurés en lien avec une PR. La présente étudea examiné le lien entre les niveaux d’activité physique avant l’opérationet les scores de QdVS après l’opération chez des patientsatteints de cancer de la prostate ayant subi une PR.Méthodologie : Soixante patients ont été interviewés concernantleur niveau d’activité physique à vie et ont rempli des questionnairesde QdVS 2 semaines avant et 4 semaines après l’interventionchirurgicale. On a mesuré la capacité aérobique chez unsous-groupe de 22 patients.Résultats : Des niveaux plus élevés d’activité physique totale pendantl’année précédente et d’activité physique au travail étaientsignificativement corrélés à une baisse moins importante du scorede QdVS entre la période précédant l’intervention et la mesureeffectuée 4 semaines après l’intervention (bêta = -0,364, p = 0,037et bêta = -0,243, p = 0,089, respectivement) dans des modèlescorrigés pour tenir compte de l’âge, de la date où le questionnairepostopératoire a été rempli, du score de Gleason et du niveau d’éducation.Le niveau d’activité physique au travail de l’année précédenteétait corrélé de façon nettement positive avec le niveau d’activitéphysique total de l’année précédente (r = 0,85, p < 0,001).L’activité physique totale à vie était corrélée avec la valeur estiméede consommation maximale d’oxygène (r = 0,486, p = 0,026) chezles 22 patients dont la capacité aérobique avait été évaluée. Aucunecorrélation n’a été notée entre le niveau d’activité physique à vieet au cours de l’année précédente d’une part et la circonférencede la taille ou l’indice de masse corporelle d’autre part.Interprétation : Le déclin de la qualité de vie liée à la santé aprèsune PR pourrait être réduit chez les patients dont le niveau d’activitéphysique avant l’opération est plus élevé, selon l’évaluationdes patients. Ces résultats doivent être confirmés à l’aide d’étudesportant sur de plus grandes populations de patients. Uneconfirmation de ces résultats signifierait que la pratique d’activitésphysiques avant l’intervention chirurgicale pourrait améliorerles scores de QdVS après une PR.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chi Keung Tam ◽  
Colman Patrick McGrath ◽  
Samuel Mun Yin Ho ◽  
Edmond Ho Nang Pow ◽  
Henry Wai Kuen Luk ◽  
...  

Introduction. The psychosocial and quality of life (QoL) of patients with deformed or missing ears are frequently compromised. The aim of this study is to develop innovative techniques using CAD/CAM technology in prosthetic auricular rehabilitation and provide improvement in the treatment outcomes, including their psychology and QoL.Methods. This is a preliminary clinical cohort study. Six patients requesting for auricular reconstruction were recruited and rehabilitated with implant-supported prosthesis using CAD/CAM technology. Different treatment outcomes including QoL and psychological changes were assessed at different time points.Results. A significant reduction in severity of depressive symptoms(P=0.038)and an improving trend of satisfaction with life were found at 1 year postoperatively when compared with the preoperative findings. The domain scores in ‘‘Body image’’, ‘‘Family/friends/strangers’’, and ‘‘Mood’’ were also significantly higher(P<0.05)at 1 year postoperatively than 1 week postoperatively. However, only 50% of the patients wear their auricular prosthesis regularly.Conclusion. This preliminary study has confirmed that implant-supported auricular prosthesis could induce improvement in the psychology and QoL with statistically significant differences in the domains of the body image, social interaction, and mood. Our present findings can inform research design and hypotheses generation of future studies.


2012 ◽  
Vol 51 (9) ◽  
pp. 1123-1130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amanda A. Cyrulnik ◽  
Kate V. Viola ◽  
Aron J. Gewirtzman ◽  
Steven R. Cohen

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