TY - JOUR
T1 - A problem-based learning tutorial for dental students regarding elderly residents in a nursing home in Japan
AU - Matsuka, Yoshizo
AU - Nakajima, Ryu
AU - Miki, Haruna
AU - Kimura, Aya
AU - Kanyama, Manabu
AU - Minakuchi, Hajime
AU - Shinkawa, Shigehiko
AU - Takiuchi, Hiroya
AU - Nawachi, Kumiko
AU - Maekawa, Kenji
AU - Arakawa, Hikaru
AU - Fujisawa, Takuo
AU - Sonoyama, Wataru
AU - Mine, Atsushi
AU - Hara, Emilio Satoshi
AU - Kikutani, Takeshi
AU - Kuboki, Takuo
PY - 2012/12/1
Y1 - 2012/12/1
N2 - This educational trial was an eight-day problem-based learning (PBL) course for fourth-year predoctoral students at Okayama University's dental school who interviewed elderly residents living in a nursing home. The purpose of this PBL course was to introduce geriatric dentistry to the students by allowing them, independently, to discover the clinical problems of elderly patients as well as the solutions. The sixty-five students were divided into nine small groups and received patient information (age, gender, degree of care needed, medical history, food type, medications, and oral condition) in datasheets before visiting the nursing home. Each group of students directly interviewed one patient and the caregivers and identified the patient's medical, psychological, and social problems. After the interview, the students participated in a PBL tutorial to delineate a management approach for the patient's problems. To measure the efficacy of this program, the students completed a questionnaire before and after the course regarding their level of understanding of and attitudes toward geriatric dentistry, clinical research, and self-study. The results showed that students' perceptions of their knowledge about and attitudes toward oral health care for the elderly significantly increased after the PBL course, which suggests that such tutorials should be an option for dental curricula.
AB - This educational trial was an eight-day problem-based learning (PBL) course for fourth-year predoctoral students at Okayama University's dental school who interviewed elderly residents living in a nursing home. The purpose of this PBL course was to introduce geriatric dentistry to the students by allowing them, independently, to discover the clinical problems of elderly patients as well as the solutions. The sixty-five students were divided into nine small groups and received patient information (age, gender, degree of care needed, medical history, food type, medications, and oral condition) in datasheets before visiting the nursing home. Each group of students directly interviewed one patient and the caregivers and identified the patient's medical, psychological, and social problems. After the interview, the students participated in a PBL tutorial to delineate a management approach for the patient's problems. To measure the efficacy of this program, the students completed a questionnaire before and after the course regarding their level of understanding of and attitudes toward geriatric dentistry, clinical research, and self-study. The results showed that students' perceptions of their knowledge about and attitudes toward oral health care for the elderly significantly increased after the PBL course, which suggests that such tutorials should be an option for dental curricula.
KW - Dementia
KW - Dental education
KW - Dental students
KW - Dependent elderly
KW - Health care for the elderly
KW - Japan
KW - Nursing homes
KW - Patients with special needs
KW - Problem-based learning
KW - Systemic disease
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84871046717&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=84871046717&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
C2 - 23225677
AN - SCOPUS:84871046717
SN - 0022-0337
VL - 76
SP - 1580
EP - 1588
JO - Journal of Dental Education
JF - Journal of Dental Education
IS - 12
ER -