Is there a common pattern of dental specialties in the world? Orthodontics, the constant element
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
García Espona, Juan Ignacio; Garcia Espona, Cristina; Alarcón Pérez, José Antonio; García Espona, Juan Ignacio; Fernández Serrano, JavierEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Dental specialties Orthodontics Oral surgery
Date
2024-01-08Referencia bibliográfica
Garcia-Espona, I., Garcia-Espona, C., Alarcón, J.A. et al. Is there a common pattern of dental specialties in the world? Orthodontics, the constant element. BMC Oral Health 24, 49 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12903-023-03713-5
Résumé
Background There is a lack of studies comparing the status of dental specialties worldwide. Therefore, this study
aimed to analyze the differences and similarities between the number and types of dental specialties in 31 countries,
including every continent, in the world.
Materials and methods Available official documents and webpages from regulatory bodies, official colleges
and councils, and dental institutions were collected from 31 countries and analyzed to obtain reliable data on dental
specialties. Differences were analyzed using the Lorentz curve and Gini test. Additionally, a cluster analysis was performed
to obtain groups of countries with similar patterns in the number and types of dental specialties.
Results A total of 32 different specialties were officially recognized among all the analyzed countries. Orthodontics
and oral surgery (100% and 93.1%, respectively) were the two most frequently officially recognized dental specialties
worldwide. The total global degree of inequality in the 31 analyzed countries was 42.4%. The Anglo-Saxon countries
showed the greatest similarity, approximately 15-fold higher than the European countries. Cluster analysis differentiated
six main groups of countries according to the number and types of dental specialties. European countries
formed one of the two largest clusters, and the other cluster was of Anglo-Saxon, Asian, African, and several Eastern
European countries with a high number of specialties.
Conclusions Officially recognized dental specialties in the different continents and countries show an asymmetric
organization. The number, names, and skills of officially recognized dental specialties exhibited significant differences,
showing inequalities in their organization. The Anglo-Saxon pattern of dental specialties showed greater equality
than the European pattern. Orthodontics was the only constant element among the different patterns.