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23


Unusual Large Stafne Bone Pseudocyst: A Case Report [Case Report]

Hulbrock, John M; Maitland, Ronald; Gray, Richard G
PMID: 29847046
ISSN: 0025-4800
CID: 4194962

Oral Jewelry and Piercing: Risks to Health

Maitland, Ronald I; Blye, Jeffrey S
What appears to be a decorative fad, pursued by people of all ages, is, for the most part, an invasion of the body by poorly trained individuals. Simple-to-complex, the insertion of body jewelry is embarked upon on a whim with little concern for health, including the possibility of infection. Many of those who opt for piercings have outcomes that are unremarkable and relatively trouble free. Others, less fortunate, end up with irreversible scars, serious infections, torn anatomic structures and teeth that are fractured, disfigured or have drifted out of line.
PMID: 30561963
ISSN: 0028-7571
CID: 3658542

What it means to be a doctor sensitizing the dentist and the student to professionalism

Maitland, Ronald I
Professional demeanor and the inter-personal behavior of the dentist play a large part in building the trust patients measure as they gain confidence in their choice of practitioner. Most of the time, patients experience comfort through the competent, compassionate care of a genuinely respected provider. That important im- age is determined by the ethical and proper relationships every patient encounters. The following discussion brings to the forefront image-damaging episodes that have occurred as a result of unwise or unthinking circumstances playing out not only in the office, but in the community and in private life as well. Can a professional shield the public from disappointing legal, unprofessional entanglements that could cast doubt on the good judgment and safety expected of the doctor? What effects on a practice may be seen?
PMID: 25928970
ISSN: 0028-7571
CID: 1557242

Professional responsibility and patient retention: alerts for the new dentist

Maitland, Ronald
Getting to know your patients, well beyond recognition of their specific chief dental complaint, is most important in operating a successful and satisfying practice. In addition to the clinical findings and pertinent history alerts, a good understanding of the person being treated can go a long way toward cementing lasting and rewarding doctor-patient relationships. Almost all new patients to the practice are welcome. However, an occasional "difficult" patient can be identified. This is the patient who you will not be able to satisfy, who cultivates misunderstandings, is unfairly over demanding, wastes office time in innumerable ways and eventually causes great frustration for the dentist. These patients may leave the practice in an unpleasant termination. Concerns of litigation arise, and one must also consider the waste of economic and emotional currency, as well as any other negative repercussions that may result. The dentist should become skilled at early identification of potentially risky, disruptive and problematic persons seeking treatment.
PMID: 24654364
ISSN: 0028-7571
CID: 1570512

Debatable evidence for the adverse drug reactions to local anaesthetics

Maitland, Ronald I
Data sourcesMedline, Embase, Chinese National Knowledge Infrastructure VIP Database for Chinese Technical Periodicals (and Chinese Biomedical Literature Database.Study selectionRandomised controlled trials (RCTs), non-RCTs, case-control studies, case reports, case series and cross-sectional studies that focused on adverse drug reactions of local anaesthetics were considered.Data extraction and synthesisData abstraction was conducted independently by two reviewers, and summary data and a meta-analysis presented.ResultsOne hundred and one studies reporting 1645 events were included. Seven of these were deaths. Lidocaine (43.17%) and bupivacaine (16.32%) were the most often involved local anaesthetics. According to the meta-analysis, the risk of using LA alone was lower than when combined with epinephrine.ConclusionsThe present study demonstrated that the adverse drug reactions of local anaesthetics could not be ignored, especially in oral and ophthalmologic treatments. Some adverse drug reactions could be avoided by properly evaluating the conditions of patients and correctly applying local anaesthetics.
PMID: 23792401
ISSN: 1462-0049
CID: 402052

Prescription writing for dentists: ethical and legal guidelines [Letter]

Maitland, Ronald I
PMID: 22919943
ISSN: 0025-4800
CID: 225592

Disturbing trends in dental education

Maitland, Ronald I
PMID: 17083433
ISSN: 1496-4155
CID: 225602

The New York State postgraduate fifth-year dental residency as a new licensure path: concerns for public protection

Maitland, Ronald I
The recently enacted law creating an alternative pathway to dental licensure in New York state is benchmark legislation. Along with the positive effects of dental education that may ensue, the author has serious concerns that the strongly emotional and political debate occurring during the bill's consideration obscured important considerations for public safety and the erosion of standards for licensure in New York. In addition, this pathway has potential to negatively affect freedom of movement and licensure by credentials for practice in other jurisdictions.
PMID: 12665059
ISSN: 0022-0337
CID: 225612

A response from the American Association of Dental Examiners [Comment]

Cole, James R 2nd; Maitland, Ronald I
The American Association of Dental Examiners supports a testing environments that include supervision of patient care. Extensive steps are taken in licensure examinations to ensure content validity through standardization by practice surveys, standards of competency, common core content, dental school curricula, and the limitations of practical constraints. Examining agencies report consistent, high collaboration among examiners. The examining community has developed comprehensive standards that compare favorably with standards in the testing community generally. When more reliable and valid alternatives to existing testing methods become available, they will be employed.
PMID: 12132260
ISSN: 0002-7979
CID: 225622

Dental ethics and treating your family [Case Report]

Maitland, R I; Duthie, R C
PMID: 9540710
ISSN: 0025-4800
CID: 225632