• J Dent Educ · Aug 2004

    A snapshot of the U.S. postdoctoral pediatric dentistry faculty workforce, 2002.

    • Paul S Casamassimo, Robert Feigal, Steven M Adair, Joel Berg, and Ray Stewart.
    • Department of Dentistry, Columbus Children's Hospital, 700 Children's Drive, Columbus, OH 43205, USA. casamassimo.1@osu.edu
    • J Dent Educ. 2004 Aug 1; 68 (8): 823-8.

    AbstractThis study characterizes the faculty shortage in U.S. postdoctoral pediatric dentistry (PD) education. The objectives of the study were to determine: 1) the changes in PD faculty numbers and teaching loads between 1995 and 2002 for postdoctoral PD education, 2) current faculty age and training, and 3) distribution of faculty by age. A questionnaire was sent in 2002 to fifty-four programs, of which forty-six responded (85 percent). Dental school and residency mean class sizes increased in the seven-year study period from 82.8 to 91.8 and from 6.0 to 8.5, respectively. Full- and part-time mean faculty positions increased as did vacancies, the latter growing from 15 to 38.9 and changing during the period from 5 to 10.8 percent of available positions. About one-third of programs used general dentists to teach PD, while programs using foreign-trained educators grew from 4 to 13 percent. Twenty-nine percent of full-time and 27 percent of part-time faculty are fifty-five years or older, and young entry-level faculty, age twenty-five to twenty-nine, represent only 2 percent and 5 percent of full- and part-time faculty respectively. Faculty vacancies have increased along with numbers of students and residents, and the largest segment of PD faculty is within a decade of retirement age.

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