Oasis Discussions

Evidence-Based Dentistry in a Nutshell

This summary is based on information found in Comprehensive Preventive Dentistry (Wiley Publishing, 2013)

Epidemiology

Epidemiology Process

  1. Observation: An initial observation of the distribution of a disease in a population leads to the suspicion that a given factor influences the occurrence of disease.
  2. Formulation of specific hypotheses: The suspicions concerning influence of a particular factor on disease occurrence is stated as a formal hypothesis, a tentative plausible theory and a supposition that links the onset of disease with some factor in a form that will allow it to be tested and refuted (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 2006).
  3. Conduct study and assess validity of association: A plausible hypothesis is tested by means of an epidemiological study.
  4. Make a judgement on causation: An association exists if two variables appear to be related by a mathematical relationship; with a change of one appears to be related to the change in the other in the opposite direction or in the parallel direction.

Study designs in epidemiologic studies and their analytical framework

Descriptive studies

Analytical studies

Experimental or interventional studies

Description of a randomized controlled trial

Research synthesis

Critical appraisal of research: general guidelines

Concept of cause and effect in epidemiological studies

List of References (PDF)

3 Comments

  1. Lesia Waschuk July 22, 2016

    This is a helpful summary for dental educators and students, and also for practitioners who appreciate a review of the theory underlying evidence-based clinical practice.

    Reply
  2. Susan Sutherland July 28, 2016

    Nice summary, but the title is misleading. This is NOT evidence-based dentistry in a nutshell; rather it is a summary of the underlying principles of epidemiology that address one of the three important components of EBD, that is the external research evidence.

    EBD has two other very significant elements — patient values /expectations and clinician expertise. EBD is the integration of the three concepts in the provision of the best care for the patient.

    Reply
    1. Lesia Waschuk August 5, 2016

      True. A recent contributor to oasisdiscussions.ca considered these elements separately as “value-based dentistry,” and I didn’t agree with him that these are two distinct concepts that are in conflict. See the highlights at https://oasisdiscussions.ca/2016/07/21/vbd/ The subtitle of Dr. Koka’s article is “Putting the Patient First.” Patient-centred practice can and should be evidence-based, and evidence-based practice should also be “value-based.” I wonder if there’s been a change in the use and understanding of the term “evidence-based dentistry” in the scientific and educational literature and amongst practitioners over time. In any case, dental practitioners need to be able to elicit and address their patients’ beliefs and concerns and should know how to read reports of study findings and reviews critically, wherever they may appear, in order to develop appropriate treatment plans and preventive regimens that will restore and maintain their patients’ oral health. This week’s sensational headlines that patients “no longer need to floss” have surely led to many conversations in dental offices that show how important these skills are to developing relationships of trust with our patients and serving their best interests.

      Reply

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *