UOP
A Dental School That Serves the Practicing Profession
Arthur A. Dugoni, DDS, MSD
Copyright 2002 Journal of the California Dental Association.
Author
Arthur A. Dugoni, DDS, MSD, is dean and professor
of orthodontics at the School of Dentistry, University of the Pacific.
The School of Dentistry at the University of the Pacific is a bridge between
one of the great private universities in the West and one of the nation’s
most respected professions. The mission of Pacific is to provide a superior,
student-centered learning environment integrating liberal arts and professional
education, and preparing individuals for lasting achievement and responsible
leadership in their careers and communities. Among its core values are
academic distinctiveness, building relationships with our communities,
and using outcomes data for continuous improvement. This makes it a unique
home for educating competent beginning dental practitioners in a humanistic
environment. Pacific may be the only dental school in the United States
that is not part of a research-intensive university or a major health
sciences campus with their emphases on medicine, basic science research,
and cost recovery through tertiary care. Our environment is the world
of the private practitioner.
It is the purpose of the School of Dentistry to serve the needs of the
dental profession. Our graduates are competent to begin modern private
practices and remain current throughout their careers or to enter the
best graduate programs. Our professional development program emphasizes
hands-on skill-building courses. The research we conduct focuses on clinical
applications to the practice of dentistry. We have initiated new programs
in oral and maxillofacial surgery and dental hygiene in response to needs
identified by the profession. Our clinics provide safety-net services
to population groups such as the medically compromised and transient and
disadvantaged communities the profession cannot easily reach. And Pacific
continues to provide its share of exceptional leaders for the profession.
Competency-Based Education
It is no surprise that competency-based professional education began
at Pacific. Competency means the capability to begin independent professional
practice and acceptance of responsibility for continuous professional
development. This replaces the old model where the curriculum was driven
by a desire of the faculty to tell everything they know. There are three
problems with that older view. With a big enough faculty and an exploding
knowledge base, the curriculum would expand beyond reasonable limits.
There is always the danger that what teachers find interesting and important
may not efficiently match what practitioners need. And finally, learners
should be given the opportunity and ultimately full responsibility for
being able to direct their own professional growth.
Competency-based professional education begins by identifying the skills,
understanding, and supporting values required to begin practice. The faculty
at Pacific has identified 59 such competencies. Among these are "evaluate
the range of available dental therapies for individual patients’ dental,
medical, and personal situations, including advantages, disadvantages,
and risk-benefits rations," "perform simple and surgical tooth and root
extractions," "function as a patient’s primary and comprehensive oral
health care provider," and "think critically, solve problems, and base
dental decisions on evidence and theory." If this sound more like what
practitioners do than schoolwork for students, that is as it should be.
Competencies, not numerical requirements, drive the graduation decision.
The competency approach to curriculum design is now practiced in all
U. S. and Canadian dental schools. It is a requirement of the accreditation
process. Competency-based education is also beginning to appear in other
professional programs such as nursing, dietetics, law, and business. But
Pacific remains the only dental school that drives its educational program
based entirely on the needs of practitioners. For example, we are the
only dental school that completes the four-year predoctoral program in
36 months. That is possible because we have eliminated the activities
that do not directly support initial competence. This has required careful
differentiation of what is essential compared with what is nice to know
and awareness of how the profession is changing. The faculty has also
developed the perspective that the curriculum belongs to the whole faculty
and is not a collection of disciplines that fight for clock hours.
Competency-based education views learning as a 10- to 15-year journey
through the predictable stages of novice, beginner, competent, proficient,
and mastery or expertise. The first three stages are accomplished in dental
school. The four-academic-years-in-36-months curriculum at Pacific is
accomplished by dramatically shortening the novice stage and somewhat
telescoping the beginner stage. Clinical education, where competency is
achieved, is actually expanded. Pacific students are among those in the
top half dozen in the country in clinical experiences, consistently performing
10 percent to 15 percent more dentistry than the national average, and
doing so with one fewer year of overall education. Pacific was a pioneer
in the early 1970s of the comprehensive patient care model of clinical
education. This is an essential foundation for competency-based education
because dentists must learn to integrate a wide repertoire of skills,
understanding, and values in realistic settings. Novices are very good
at doing what the faculty tells them to do, and beginners are good at
getting requirements (doing what they need to do). Only competent practitioners
are good at doing what is in the patient’s best interest.
Not all learners achieve competence on the same time schedule. Years
ago, to break the traditional lock-step sequencing of the dental school
curriculum, we introduced "breathing spaces" at key points where students
who needed tutorial assistance could get it. It turns out that this also
provided the opportunity for a rich array of selective courses throughout
the three years. In some years, a few students are retained at the end
of three years for additional clinical experiences. Last year, we added
enrichment experiences in the final quarter for nine students who were
deemed competent before the nominal graduation date.
The proof of the competency-based approach to dental education is in
the performance of our graduates. Table 2 shows the four-year yield of
our program since 1993. This is not the pass rate on state boards; it
is the proportion of students who first enter the program and are qualified
to practice independently four years later. The two or three percent who
do not achieve competency include those who have difficulties with state
or national boards, are extended for further training by the faculty or
who repeat, and those who are dismissed, change their career goals, or
experience severe illness or other personal problems. Our three-year yield,
the proportion that is qualified to practice in 36 months, has now reached
87 percent.
By focusing on the needs of practicing professionals rather than academic
disciplines, Pacific has proven that dental education can be effective
and efficient.
Humanism and Leadership
I have frequently stated that we have the privilege of educating outstanding
young men and women at Pacific, and along the way they become doctors.
A large part of being a professional is who one is, not just how smart
or talented one happens to be. It will not do just to train the head and
hands and leave out the heart. Although we teach modalities that are state
of the art; the care that our graduates provide must be state of the heart.
Humanism and leadership are not optional at Pacific. Among the competency
statements developed by the faculty are "establish and maintain patient
rapport" and "participate in organized dentistry." We feel the profession
expects and deserves this of the young people entering the dental profession.
Humanism is a major part of the culture of the dental school. Over the
years, faculty and administrators have learned how to challenge and motivate
students to excel, how to correct problems in patient care, and even how
to take criticism from students in ways that preserve students’ self-respect
and individuality. There has been a self-selection for these traits. The
students’ view matters. In regular meetings, students meet with the administration
and faculty on a regular basis to discuss how the program can be improved.
All student suggestions are taken seriously, investigated, and acted upon
if appropriate; and then students are told what happened. Students are
active members of all committees, including the faculty appointment, promotion,
and tenure committees. Participation, including funding for attendance
at national meetings, is encouraged for student representatives to the
American Dental Association, the American Student Dental Association,
the California Dental Association, the American Dental Education Association,
and several research associations. Student government is active and currently
includes 12 percent of the entire student body.
Students in all dental schools have been active in community service
and outreach. Screenings, foreign missions, and fund-raising activities
are typical examples. At Pacific, the emphasis has been on full participation.
For the past two years, 100 percent of each graduating class has participated
in some form of community outreach. This program -- called SCOPE, for
Student Community Outreach for Patient Education -- is run by students
as a way of instilling the values of "giving something back to the community."
The profession should be proud of this level of involvement.
The values of humanism and leadership learned in dental school continue
through one’s professional careers. They affect the way dentists think
of themselves and how they interact with their patients and staff. These
values also influence involvement in the profession. Two ADA presidents
in recent years were Pacific faculty members (Drs. Arthur Dugoni and Burton
Press). Seventeen percent of the dentists practicing in California are
graduates of Pacific. A count from the Leadership Directory of the California
Dental Association reveals that 41 percent of the state and component
society officers in this state are Pacific graduates. The contributions
of talent, time, and treasure to the profession and the school speak volumes
regarding the satisfaction our alumni feel with their careers. Humanism
and competency together are a powerful mix and a strong foundation for
the future of the profession.
Helping Meet the Needs of Special Patient Populations
Every dentist cannot provide care for every type of patient. But the
profession as a whole needs to provide this broad range of services to
retain the public’s trust. Each of the dental schools in California helps
provide such "safety-net" coverage, and Pacific has its own special niches.
Dental schools have traditionally been clinics where patients traded
time for money: They pay a little less because the care takes a little
longer. We are not satisfied with that arrangement at Pacific. One of
the elements in our overall mission statements is to "provide patient-centered,
comprehensive, quality care in an efficient clinical model that demonstrates
the highest standards of service achievable." Our clinic mission statement
affirms, "The mission of the school’s clinics is to provide patient-centered,
quality oral health care in a humanistic educational environment." We
are working to move away from the model of compensating patients for the
inconvenience we impose and toward reducing that inconvenience to a minimum.
The competency-based approach and humanism both require this. We have
cut the time required from initial screening to first therapeutic procedure
in half and decreased "redos" by 40 percent in the past five years. Recalls
are up, and chart audits show a significantly improved quality of care.
We truly seek to model appropriate and comprehensive patient care rather
than focus on isolated technical procedures.
Because of our location in San Francisco, Pacific has been a long-time
and active participant in the Ryan White program. This is a national program
that reimburses health care providers for the extra expenses involved
in treating HIV-positive and AIDS patients. For the past five years, the
clinics at Pacific have provided more than 5,000 professional visits for
these patients per year. Our Advance Education in General Dentistry program
has a national reputation for its work with patients who have developmental,
emotional, and other disabilities. We are currently in the second year
of a program funded by the California Endowment to establish regional
treatment centers and train dentists and other health care professionals
to provide care to patients with special needs in their own communities.
Pacific has a tradition of establishing partnerships with the profession
for bringing care to underserved communities. Our Union City Dental Care
Center was built to serve a group of patients in the East Bay by gifts
from our alumni in 1976 and remodeled in 2002. We are currently building
a treatment facility to bring care to underserved patients in San Joaquin
County. For the past two years, Pacific has received more scholarships
for establishing dental practices in areas with low dentist-to-population
ratios than the other California schools combined. We also rotate students
through clinics in Northern California that have been created by component
dental societies and communities to reach the underserved. In this way,
dental students learn first-hand about the sense of responsibility that
the profession must demonstrate to serve the underserved and provide access
to care.
Another example of helping the profession provide the full range of care
to patients is the creation of a hygiene program. In the fall of 2002,
we will accept the first class of 32 students in the nation’s first three-year
baccalaureate dental hygiene program. This will be a joint program on
the campus of our parent university in Stockton. Students will complete
18 months of general education and prerequisites in the biomedical sciences
with the university faculty and then finish with 18 months of clinical
training in clinics that are currently under construction on the campus.
Not only will this help address the critical shortage of hygienists for
practice, it will also ease the even more critical shortfall of educators
for hygiene programs. This program has had the guidance, endorsement,
and financial support of the San Joaquin, Fresno-Madera, Stanislaus, and
Sacramento District dental societies.
Competence to Mastery
We have served the profession incompletely if we only graduate competent
beginning dentists. Two of the stages in professional development occur
following graduation. With practice, and certain kinds of help, dentists
become proficient and then they become experts. Pacific has begun to offer
help here as well.
We have intensively studied our graduates during the first 12 years of
practice. For example, we have discovered that they borrow almost 1 1/2
times as much to start their practices as they did for their dental education.
They also pay back their loans in from seven to 10 years, at about 10
percent of their practice income, and their default rate is among the
lowest of all professionals -- less than 0.2 percent.
Recent graduates feel competent in a broad range of procedures and gradually
reduce the variety of techniques performed (through referral) to customize
a practice in which they can become true experts. Beginning practitioners
are outstanding learners. They use a blend of formal continuing education,
journals, peers, observation of their own outcomes, and other sources
to remain current. And they are current. There is no difference in the
frequency of using newly developed techniques (such as implants, veneers,
cosmetic approaches) between those who were taught these techniques in
school and their older colleagues who learned the techniques themselves.
(Recall that part of the definition of competency is to assume responsibility
for one’s continued professional development.)
One skill our recent graduates identified as being an increasing concern
is the blizzard of new product claims. Never before has the profession
been subjected to so many and such quickly changing messages about how
to practice. In response, we have added in each curriculum year material
and even whole courses designed to develop competency in critical thinking.
Although we teach the traditional material on research design and statistics,
our true focus is on how to read an ad, use the Internet to find out what
the patient is learning, and how to think through product claims as independent
professionals.
Table 2 shows that Pacific graduates tend overwhelmingly to become
independent owners of their own practices. The 96 percent ownership level
within a decade of graduation compares favorably with the national average
of just more than 80 percent in a dentist’s lifetime. Although Pacific
graduates are more likely to start a "scratch" practice or to associate
and less apt to work as employees than are graduates of other schools,
many also specialize before starting practice. Graduate programs are an
excellent way to accelerate the proficiency stage of the learning curve.
In the days of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, we had most graduate
programs, but amalgamation with the University of the Pacific required
consolidation where we could demonstrate strength. From 1967 to 1990,
we offered graduate training only in orthodontics, with a two-year program
leading to the master of science in dentistry degree in addition to the
certificate. Our Advanced Education in General Dentistry program -- with
emphasis on special-needs patients -- has been in place for 12 years.
A special feature of this program is its emphasis on distance learning.
Next year, we will have three campuses in this program -- San Francisco,
Union City, and Stockton -- all connected by videoconferencing for didactic
instruction and live consultation. The program is part of a national network
that has already been sharing course materials and engaging in seminars
with simultaneous participation from residents in states such as New York
and Arizona.
Our most recent graduate program is in oral and maxillofacial surgery.
The Highland Hospital program in Alameda Country has become part of Pacific.
This program has two residents in each of four years and a distinguished
tradition of training hands-on oral and maxillofacial surgeons. The innovative,
three-year baccalaureate dental hygiene program has already been described.
These four independently accredited programs represent Pacific’s response
to the growing needs for advanced training in dentistry. Rather than add
years to the undergraduate program and require that all students spend
more time getting ready to practice, we believe the profession is better
served by laying a strong foundation in the shortest possible time and
allowing practitioners to choose the direction and depth of additional
formal training they desire.
Becoming an expert in dentistry requires years of experience and constant
searching for improvement. Pacific’s approach to professional development
is designed to strengthen the profession this way. We recognized about
10 years ago that the lecture update courses with big-name speakers belonged
to organized dentistry and that we should fill a niche that no one else
was adequately covering. What practitioners told us they needed were hands-on
extended clinical experiences -- something like the old study club approach.
Currently, Pacific offers multiweek, laboratory and clinical, participation
courses in endodontics, anesthesia, periodontics, prosthodontics, implants,
surgery, and esthetic dentistry. In some of these disciplines, the participation
programs are sequenced in as many as three levels of difficulty to form
learning continua.
Blurring the Line
The best practitioners are always learning; the best educators are always
practicing. Lines between education and practice have been drawn more
distinctly than they need to be or than is helpful to the profession.
Of the 319 faculty members currently at Pacific, nine are full-time administrators,
nine are biomedical scientists, and 46 are full-time. Most of those who
are qualified to do so practice one day a week. We have 114 one-, two-
and three-day per week faculty members and 152 adjunct (volunteer) faculty
members. Virtually all of these continue to practice, and many are among
the best-known and most highly respected in their communities. Among recent
graduates, an average of 8 percent teaches for some period during the
first 12 years following graduation.
Practitioners are drawn to Pacific to share some of what they have learned
with the next generation of their colleagues and to be part of the inquiring
environment of a dental school. Scholarship -- disciplines, peer-reviewed
generation of new and useful ideas -- is expected of every faculty member.
This includes adjunct faculty members who are invited to join ongoing
teams. Pacific is even developing the concept of the "scholarship of practice,"
systematic improvements in the practice of dentistry.
Each dental school in the United States is unique or nearly so. What
makes Pacific special is its determination to serve the practicing profession.
Legends

Figure 1. Dr. Phil Oppenheimer, dean of the Thomas J. Long School
of Pharmacy; Dr. Donald DeRosa, president of the University of the Pacific;
and Dr. Arthur Dugoni, dean of the UOP School of Dentistry, help break
ground at UOP’s new $21 million Health Sciences Learning Center and Clinics
on the Stockton campus. The facility will house a state-of-the-art clinic
for the dental school’s new hygiene program and its expanded Advanced
Education in General Dentistry program in the Central Valley.
Figure 2. Sohail Saghezchi, class of 2002, presents his senior research
project on gene therapy in human oral cancer cells to faculty at UOP School
of Dentistry’s annual Research Day.

Figure 3. CDA Speaker of the House and Pacific Alumnus Dr. Sig Abelson,
’69, with his wife, Teri Abelson, receives a thumbs up from their son,
Dr. Michael Abelson, ’89, for receiving the School of Dentistry’s prestigious
Medallion of Distinction Award at the 103rd Annual Alumni Association
Meeting.
Figure 4. UOP School of Dentistry Dean Dr. Arthur A. Dugoni congratulates
Courtney Inada, class of 2004, as she receives her white coat and certificate
during the White Coat Ceremony at the Herbst Theatre in San Francisco.
The ceremony focuses on the importance of professionalism, ethics, and
responsibility to the community as the second-year dental students begin
their new roles as health care providers.

Figure 5. Student volunteers from UOP’s Student Community Outreach
for Public Education organization provide dental screenings and oral health
education to adults and children at the annual Chinatown Community Health
Fair in San Francisco.

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