5 research outputs found
Teacher Education Policy in Canada: Beyond Professionalization and Deregulation
This paper empirically investigates Grimmett’s (2008, 2009) thesis that recent Canadian teacher education policy is best characterized by dual forces of deregulation and professionalization resulting from a neoliberal policy environment. Specifically, we examine teacher education governance, policy reform, and political context from 2000 to 2010, across four Canadian provinces: Alberta, British Columbia, Manitoba, and Ontario. Our paper highlights the presence of deregulation and professionalization in Canadian teacher education policy while also revealing additional opposing force. We provide an overview of the policy context in US teacher education as a point of reference.Keywords: Teacher education, policy, deregulation, professionalizatio
Pregnant women’s perspectives on integrating preventive oral health in prenatal care
Background:
Oral diseases are considered a silent epidemic including among pregnant women. Given the prevalence of oral conditions among pregnant women and the reported association with adverse pregnancy outcomes, there have been suggestions for the inclusion of preventive oral care in routine prenatal care. However, due to the different administrative and funding structure for oral health and prenatal care in Canada, progress towards this integration has been slow. Our study sought to qualitatively explore the views of pregnant women in British Columbia (BC) on the strategies for integrating preventive oral health care into prenatal care services.
Methods:
A qualitative approach was utilized involving semi-structured interviews with fourteen (14) purposefully selected pregnant women in Vancouver and Surrey, BC. The interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. The transcripts were analyzed using an inductive thematic approach. Study validity was ensured via memoing, field-notes, and member checking.
Results:
Interviews ranged from 28 to 65 min producing over 140 pages of transcripts. Analysis resulted in three major themes: oral health experiences during pregnancy, perspectives on integration and integrated prenatal oral care, and strategies for addressing prenatal oral health care. A majority of participants were supportive of integrating preventive oral care in routine prenatal services, with referrals identified as a critical strategy. Oral health education was recognized as important before, during, and after pregnancy; oral health assessments should therefore be included in the prenatal care checklist. Limited funding was acknowledged as a barrier to oral health care access, which may explain why few participants visited their dentists during pregnancy. Interprofessional education surfaced as a bridge to provide prenatal oral health education.
Conclusion:
Pregnant women interviewed in this study support the inclusion of educational and preventive oral care during prenatal care, although their views differed on how such inclusion can be achieved in BC. They advocated the establishment of a referral system as an acceptable strategy for providing integrated prenatal oral health care.Dentistry, Faculty ofMedicine, Faculty ofOther UBCFamily Practice, Department ofOral Biological and Medical Sciences (OBMS), Department ofOral Health Sciences (OHS), Department ofPopulation and Public Health (SPPH), School ofReviewedFacult
Uncertainties around COVID-19 from the perspectives of oral health care workers during the first wave of SARS-CoV-2 infections in British Columbia, Canada
Background
The first wave of COVID-19 infections caused disturbances in all aspects of personal and
professional lives. The aim of this study was to explore the ways in which that first wave of
novel coronavirus infections resulted in uncertainties, as experienced by members of the
oral health care workforce in British Columbia, Canada.
Methods
This qualitative inquiry purposefully recruited frontline oral health care workers, including
dentists, dental hygienists, certified dental assistants, and administrative staff, via remote
semi-structured interviews between April 20 and May 4, 2020. Coding, categories, and
themes were inductively assigned.
Results
A total of 45 interviews, lasting between 39 and 74 minutes each, were conducted involving
18 dentists (6 females), 12 dental hygienists (11 females), 6 certified dental assistants (all
females), and 9 administrators/front-desk staff (7 females). Fifty-one hours of audio recordings and more than 650 single-spaced pages of transcripts were produced. Five main
themes emerged pertaining to uncertainties surrounding COVID-19, patient care, personal
lives and infectiousness, concern for the future, and variations among different pandemics.
Certitudes were less evident, but surfaced mostly when considering a potential new normal
resulting from the pandemic. Conclusion
Participants indicated that the uncertainties they felt were dependent upon what is known,
and unknown, about the pandemic and the provision of oral health care during the first wave
of infections. Future studies are needed to include the viewpoints of oral health care workers
from other provinces, as well the perceptions of patients who received oral health care during the height of the first wave of the pandemicArts, Faculty ofDentistry, Faculty ofOral Biological and Medical Sciences (OBMS), Department ofOral Health Sciences (OHS), Department ofPsychology, Department ofReviewedFacultyGraduateUndergraduat
A Pan-Canadian narrative review on the protocols for reopening dental services during the COVID-19 pandemic
The current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic is impacting the way in which dental services are provided. The aim of this narrative review was twofold: to summarize key areas from the Canadian protocols available for the reopening and restructuring of dental services across the country and to critically review these protocols based on existing evidence. A narrative review of the existing Canadian protocols, written in English and French, was undertaken between April 15 and July 13, 2020. The protocols were obtained by searching through regulatory bodies and websites from professional organizations, and from personal contacts through academic institutions and policy leaders. The data extraction form focused only on protocols related to dentistry, and the information was compiled by a hired assistant. Content was categorized via group discussions with the research team on eight areas: office management and procedures, patient and staff screening, treatment procedures, office layout, risk reduction, personal protective equipment, supporting information, and length and readability. Thirteen protocols were identified and offered substantial variation in the level of details provided. All but two protocols specified proper donning/doffing of personal protective equipment, while all protocols recommended daily monitoring of COVID-19 related signs and symptoms in staff and patients. They varied in terms of recommended mask types, eye and face shield protection, and head coverings. While all protocols aimed at restructuring emergency dental services, their recommendations were often not based on the published evidence. This narrative review summarized key areas from 13 provincial and territorial protocols in Canada to help oral health care providers plan the reopening of their services. The information conveyed across all documents was clear, but variance highlights the need for a coordinated effort to develop an evidence-based document for dental practitioners.Arts, Faculty ofDentistry, Faculty ofNon UBCOral Biological and Medical Sciences (OBMS), Department ofOral Health Sciences (OHS), Department ofPsychology, Department ofReviewedFacult