Simulation Helps Students Learn Dental Implant Procedures
A realistic computer game will soon be used to help dental students worldwide learn and reinforce dental implant procedures, a recent Science Daily article reports. The Virtual Dental Implant Training Simulation Program is designed to help Northridge tooth implants students and students nationwide in diagnostics, decision making and treatment protocols. It was designed by Medical College of Georgia School of Dentistry faculty and students and BreakAway, Ltd., a developer of game-based technology for training, experimentation and decision-making analysis.
Northridge dental implants are tiny screws surgically placed in the jaw to act as artificial roots for prosthetic teeth. About 25 percent of adults 60 and older no longer have any natural teeth, according to the Centers for Disease Northridge tooth implantsControl and Prevention, and the need for this procedure could increase with the country's aging population. Research shows that health care providers who practice clinical skills via simulation have better patient outcomes than those who don’t.
The implant simulation game uses multiple patients and clinical scenarios that can be randomly selected, letting students interact with virtual patients by asking about their medical history, examining them and arriving at a diagnosis. Like humans, the virtual patients have different personalities, and students must tailor treatment based on the mental, physical and emotional needs of the individual.
If the virtual patient is a candidate for Woodland Hills teeth implants therapy, the simulation then ventures into a virtual clinical treatment area, where students decide the type, location and orientation of the implants, type and location of anesthesia and tools for surgery.
The program is now being evaluated for functionality and instructional usefulness by more than 20 dental schools in the Nobel Biocare University Partnership Program. This summer it will be launched at 25 universities worldwide, potentially reaching 15,000 dental students, a top Northridge cosmetic dentist says.
In most instances, the program will be used during the third and fourth years of dental education, depending on the curricula of each institution. Dental implant specialists hope it will be part of the dental curriculum in schools across the nation soon.
posted the 06/22/2009 at 09:48 AM by
midvalleydentalcare
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