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Knowledge of Dental Academics about the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Multi-Country Online Survey

Authors :
Simin Z. Mohebbi
Nour Ammar
Maher Rashwan
Antonella Polimeni
Mai A. Dama
Anton Rahardjo
Hans Peter Howaldt
Yousef Khader
Anas Shamala
Youn-Hee Choi
Diah Ayu Maharani
Mohammad M. Alkeshan
Nourhan M Aly
Jorge L. Castillo
Gabriella Galluccio
Arthur Kemoli
Ola B. Al-Batayneh
Maha Abdelsalam
Arheiam Arheiam
Marwa Madi
Myat Nyan
Imran Khan
Jin-Bom Kim
Sebastian Boettger
Ana Vukovic
Verica Pavlic
Easter Joury
Maha El Tantawi
Sameh Attia
Morenike Oluwatoyin Folayan
Smiljka Cicmil
Davide Mancino
Iyad Hussein
Prathip Phantumvanit
Alfredo Iandolo
Source :
BMC Medical Education, BMC Medical Education, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Research Square Platform LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Background COVID-19 is a global pandemic affecting all aspects of life in all countries. We assessed COVID-19 knowledge and associated factors among dental academics in 26 countries. Methods We invited dental academics to participate in a cross-sectional, multi-country, online survey from March to April 2020. The survey collected data on knowledge of COVID-19 regarding the mode of transmission, symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, protection, and dental treatment precautions as well as participants’ background variables. Multilevel linear models were used to assess the association between dental academics’ knowledge of COVID-19 and individual level (personal and professional) and country-level (number of COVID-19 cases/ million population) factors accounting for random variation among countries. Results Two thousand forty-five academics participated in the survey (response rate 14.3%, with 54.7% female and 67% younger than 46 years of age). The mean (SD) knowledge percent score was 73.2 (11.2) %, and the score of knowledge of symptoms was significantly lower than the score of knowledge of diagnostic methods (53.1 and 85.4%, P Conclusions Dental academics had poorer knowledge of COVID-19 symptoms than of COVID-19 diagnostic methods. Living arrangements, academic degrees, patient load, and magnitude of the epidemic in the country were associated with COVD-19 knowledge among dental academics. Training of dental academics on COVID-19 can be designed using these findings to recruit those with the greatest need.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Medical Education, BMC Medical Education, Vol 20, Iss 1, Pp 1-12 (2020)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0114dcd365e0e128fad76f9db9a147b6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-42349/v2