Premium
The Effects of Faculty Calibration on Caries Risk Assessment and Quality Assurance
Author(s) -
Goolsby Susie P.,
Young Douglas A.,
Chiang Harmeet K.,
Carrico Caroline K.,
Jackson Leonard V.,
Rechmann Peter
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of dental education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.53
H-Index - 68
eISSN - 1930-7837
pISSN - 0022-0337
DOI - 10.1002/j.0022-0337.2016.80.11.tb06214.x
Subject(s) - quality assurance , medicine , risk assessment , medical education , calibration , session (web analytics) , commonwealth , dentistry , psychology , medical physics , external quality assessment , statistics , mathematics , computer science , political science , computer security , pathology , world wide web , law
Accurate caries risk assessment (CRA) plays a pivotal role in managing the disease of dental caries. The aim of this quality assurance study was to determine if faculty calibration training using a specific set of guidelines in a single session would improve the faculty members’ CRA decision making. A calibration seminar was held in December 2014 at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Dentistry, during which seven completed CRA forms for simulated patients were used to test 55 faculty members’ risk assignment level before and after an instructional lecture was given. The results showed a statistically significant increase in the proportion of faculty members responding correctly for five of the seven cases on the pre‐ and posttests (p<0.01). One case showed no significant increase in correct responses (p=0.07), and on the seventh case, which presented low caries risk, there was a significant decrease in the percentage responding correctly (p<0.0001) due to an increase in the proportion overestimating caries risk. This study's findings were consistent with those in previous studies that, without calibration, faculty members are not necessarily accurate at CRA diagnosis. Since the calibration training improved these faculty members’ caries risk assessment scoring, future studies should extend to evaluations for both faculty and students.