Professionalism: Challenges for Dentistry in the Future

Authors

  • D.T. Ozar Department of Philosophy, Loyola University Chicago, USA

Keywords:

Ethics, Professionalism, Esthetic Dentistry, Dental Insurance, Dental Advertising, Digital Access to Oral Health Information

Abstract

While countries varies significantly in the financing of dental care, they are much more alike in the delivery of dentistry. Dental care is principally provided in dental offices and clinics that are independent business entities whose business leaders are most often the dentists themselves. However society expects from dentists a level of professionalism (i.e. habitually acting ethically, both in terms of competence and conduct) in contrast to the methods and motivations of the marketplace. This is why the single most important challenge of dental professional ethics continues to be giving proper priority to patients’ well being and building ethically correct decision-making relationships with patients while, at the same time, trying to maintain a successful business operation.
If we look into dentistry’s future, the centrality of this aspect of professional ethics is not likely to change, although the ways in which dentists might violate this trust will probably multiple as funding mechanisms become increasingly complex. It is important that dentists reflect with fresh eyes on their ethical commitments. One challenge is the increased availability of oral health information to the public and the fact that so many people are uncritical of the accuracy of information in the media and on the web. A second is the increase in the amount of health care advertising in many societies. A third is the growth of aesthetic dentistry that differs from standard oral health care in important and ethically significant ways. The fourth is insurance that frequently complicates the explanation of a patient’s treatment alternatives and often brings a third party into the treatment decision relationship. The ethical challenges of each of these factors will be considered and ultimately tying it to the central theme of dental professionalism.

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Published

2017-10-22

How to Cite

Ozar, D. (2017). Professionalism: Challenges for Dentistry in the Future. The Journal of Forensic Odonto-Stomatology - JFOS, 30(1), 72: 84. Retrieved from https://ojs.iofos.eu/index.php/Journal/article/view/118

Issue

Section

IDEALS CONFERENCE 2012 Leuven