1,900 research outputs found
The effectiveness of Atraumatic Restorative Treatment versus conventional restorative treatment for permanent molars and premolars A critical assessment of existing systematic reviews and report of a new systematic review
Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Available for download at: http://mahara.qmul.ac.uk/view/view.php?id=16447Background: Atraumatic Restorative Treatment (ART) is the removal of caries using hand instruments and restoration of the resulting cavity using an adhesive restorative material. It was designed to restore teeth in communities without access to conventional dental clinics in poorer countries but has come to be used by dentists in the developed world too, as an alternative to conventional restorative treatment. Objectives: 1) to assess the scope and the methodological and reporting quality of existing systematic reviews of the effectiveness of ART compared to conventional restorative treatment; 2) to evaluate the effectiveness of ART compared to conventional treatment in permanent teeth with class I and II cavities. Methods: Searches: 1) for the assessment of existing systematic reviews: Electronic searches were conducted of OVID Medline, OVID Embase, The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR), the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (CRD) databases (DARE, NHSEED and HTA), Google Scholar, and the CNKI and CAOD Chinese databases; 2) for the systematic reviews of ART in permanent teeth: the above searches were supplemented by searches of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), LILAC, BBO, IMEAR (WHO Index Medicus for South East Region), WPRIM (WHO Western Pacific Region Index Medicus) and IndMed, Current Controlled Trials, Clinical Trials, OpenSIGLE, IADR conference abstracts and NLM Gateway. Hand searches were conducted of six dental journals known to have reported ART studies. References from retrieved systematic reviews, trials and other related papers were searched for additional reports. Authors were contacted. There were no language restrictions. Selection criteria: 1) for the assessment of existing systematic reviews: systematic reviews that compared ART to conventional treatment for the restoration of dental cavities; 2) for the systematic reviews of ART in permanent teeth: randomised controlled trials that compared ART using any adhesive material to conventional treatment using amalgam or any adhesive material Data collection: 1) for the assessment of existing systematic reviews: Reviews were selected and data was extracted by a single reviewer using a custom made data extraction sheet. Scope was assessed in terms of materials used, teeth and cavity type. Methodological quality was assessed using AMSTAR. Reporting quality was assessed using the PRISMA guidelines; 2) for the systematic reviews of ART in permanent teeth: reports of trials were screened and selected independently by two reviewers and data would have been extracted on a custom made data extraction sheet had there been eligible trials. Results: 1) for the assessment of existing systematic reviews: three systematic reviews were identified. Two of these were restricted to comparing ART with glass-ionomer to conventional treatment with amalgam; two allowed for inclusion of all cavity types in both deciduous and permanent teeth. None was of high methodological quality and reporting quality was good in one of the reviews only; 2) for the systematic reviews of ART in permanent teeth: no eligible trials were identified. Author’s conclusions: 1) existing systematic reviews do not have sufficient scope to allow for the inclusion of potentially eligible trials that would assess ARTs effectiveness and they have been of high to medium risk of bias; 2) it is disappointing that there are no properly conducted randomised controlled trials comparing ART to conventional treatment in class I and II cavities in the permanent dentition
Conference Proceedings: 2019 TDE Postgraduate Research Student Conference
The papers presented in this publication are drawn from the Faculty of Technology, Design and Environment's Annual Research Student Conference in May 2019. The contributions highlight the excellent and varied research being carried out by our students across a range of disciplines including - Architecture, Art, Built Environment, Computing and Engineering. In addition the conference and this publication were brought together by an enthusiastic and talented group of research students
Forced Migration review Latin Americaand the Caribbeanbuilding on a tradition of protection
Forced Migration Review (FMR) provides a forum for the regular exchange of practical experience, information and ideas between researchers, refugees and internally displaced people, and those who work with them. It is published in English, Arabic, Spanish and French by the Refugee Studies Centre of the Oxford Department of International Development, University of Oxford
Rev. John W. Suttle Family Bible
This Bible was published by Oxford University Press in London. It is a S.S. Teacher’s Edition. The leather covers show signs of red rot. This Bible belonged to the Rev. John W. Suttle, who was known to many in his community as the “Little Minister.” Suttle was a circuit preacher for a number of years and only presided over rural congregations, serving as many as six at a time. The “Little Minister” also served as both the moderator for the Kings Mountain Baptist Association and a member of the Gardner-Webb University Board of Trustees for over forty years. He retired in 1955 after a 65-year career
Interior pages are available as supplemental PDF.https://digitalcommons.gardner-webb.edu/cleveland-county-historical-collection-bibles/1004/thumbnail.jp
Posters of female winners in the first 49 years of the prize
Created for the 2014 'Women and the Booker Prize' exhibition held at Oxford Brookes Universit
Financial code authorisation form
This form should accompany interlibrary loan requests submitted via the Library catalogue
Interlibrary loan request form – Brookes staff and students only
This form should be only be used for items not listed on our Library Catalogue
Use this form to obtain one of the following items via interlibrary loan: book, report, thesis, journal, conference proceeding, patent, standard or photocop
Commercial Research Interlibrary loan request form (photocopies)
For use with commercial research requests only
Wheatley Library floor plans
Plans showing the silent pace, quiet space, collaborative space and facilitie
- …