1. Implementation of a new advanced graduate education program in oral implantology.
- Author
-
Gallucci GO, Weber HP, and Kalenderian E
- Subjects
- Administrative Personnel, Boston, Communication, Costs and Cost Analysis, Curriculum, Dental Research education, Dentistry, Operative education, Evidence-Based Dentistry education, Guided Tissue Regeneration, Periodontal, Humans, Leadership, Marketing of Health Services economics, Marketing of Health Services organization & administration, Organizational Objectives, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Practice Management, Dental economics, Practice Management, Dental organization & administration, Program Development, Program Evaluation, Schools, Dental economics, Schools, Dental organization & administration, Surgery, Oral education, Teaching methods, Workforce, Dental Implantation education, Education, Dental, Graduate, Internship and Residency
- Abstract
The academic program for the Harvard School of Dental Medicine's Advanced Graduate Program in Oral Implantology is based on scientific evidence applied to educational quality, translational research, patient care, and service. The objective of the program is to enable highly motivated individuals with proven scholarship and excellence in patient care to achieve academic leadership in the clinical and scientific fields of implant dentistry and tissue regeneration. A detailed curriculum describing the academic program, as well as a business plan (which included a management plan describing the organizational structure, financial implications, and market forces) and implementation and communication plans, were developed before moving forward. With careful academic and business planning, the result was a vibrant implant program, in which all placements and restorations of implants are coordinated with regard to practice management. The program is integrated into the existing clinical care model and has been financially self-sustaining from its inception. Six students have participated in the last two years. On average, each student performed seventy-nine procedures on twenty-nine patients, generating over $46,000 in production. The curriculum includes didactics, hands-on clinical learning, and research activities. Research is a critical component as well. The results demonstrate that the time taken to develop a detailed curriculum and business plan for a new academic program, which anticipated and resolved potential barriers to success, was instrumental in the successful implementation of an oral implantology residency program.
- Published
- 2012