In the News
As reported by Proofs Magazine, February 20, 2008.
Three-year Macy Study Results Released
WASHINGTON, D.C.?The American Dental Education Association has
released the results of the three-year Macy Study New Models of
Dental Education in a special supplement to the February 2008 issue
of the Journal of Dental Education.
Funded by the Josiah H. Macy, Jr. Foundation, the study emerged
out of concerns about declines in dental school budgets and the
challenges schools faced in meeting their educational, research, and
service missions. The Macy Study proposes new clinical education
models to help schools meet these challenges.
"Resources to continuously upgrade schools are in short supply,
and new investments in the educational institutions are needed to
maintain the high academic standing of the profession," said Allan
J. Formicola, DDS, M., Macy Study Co-director and professor of
dentistry and former dean of Columbia University College of Dental
Medicine.
The project's goals were to examine the economic and political
feasibility of new models of dental education and to convene a
national meeting of experts and leaders from stakeholder
organizations to discuss them.
In April 2007 a convocation was held at Emory University and was
attended by 50 national leaders from dental education, research, and
practice. The special supplement presents the papers and discussion
from the convocation.
"The clinical education models were developed based on several
principles. They hold that dentistry is a learned, self-regulating
profession, the majority of dental schools should be based in
research universities, dental schools must have adequate resources
to meet the scholarly mission of their parent universities, and
dental schools are part of the safety net to provide care to
underserved patients," said Howard L. Bailit, DMD, PhD, Macy Study
Co-director, Professor Emeritus at the University of Connecticut
Health Center, and Research Associate in the Department of Community
Dentistry at Columbia University's College of Dental Medicine.
Many options for improving dental school finances and education
were examined, but the most feasible are to convert dental school
teaching clinics into patient-centered delivery systems in which
faculty-clinicians provide patient care while supervising residents
and students.
This model will cover the costs of operating clinical programs,
including faculty salaries and at the same time provide dental
residents and students an excellent education. Another strategy
examined was basing a portion of senior dental student and resident
training in patient?centered community clinics and practices.
The evidence suggests that both models reduce the cost of dental
education, increase student and resident clinical experience, and
provide more care to underserved patients. Most important, these new
educational models will generate the resources schools need to
invest in their teaching, research, and service programs.
"The Macy Study provides guidance for the direction dental
education should take in order to sustain and improve the already
high level of education dental students receive and to further
improve the oral health of the public," said ADEA President James Q.
Swift, DDS. |