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Adhesive restorations for the treatment of dental non-carious cervical lesions [Intervention Protocol]

Veitz-Keenan, Analia; Spivakovsky, Silvia; Lo, Danny; Furnari, Winnie; ElSayed, Hend
This protocol has been withdrawn as it is now out of date and the topic has not been identified as a priority.
SCOPUS:85076700679
ISSN: 1469-493x
CID: 4248602

Integration of Forensic Dentisty/Catastrophe Preparedness Course in Dental Hygiene Program: A 12-year Study

Chapter by: Furnari, Winnie
in: RSE : Research Scholarship Expo by
[S.l. : NYU College of Dentistry], 2018
pp. 051-051
ISBN: n/a
CID: 3157002

Professional responsibility

Chapter by: Furnari, Winnie
in: Clinical cases in dental hygiene by Theile, Cheryl M; Weinberg, Mea A; Segelnick, Stuart L (Eds)
Hoboken, NJ : Wiley-Blackwell, 2018
pp. 263-281
ISBN: 1119145023
CID: 3441342

Patients' Willingness to Participate in Rapid HIV Testing: A pilot study in three New York City dental hygiene clinics

Davide, Susan H; Santella, Anthony J; Furnari, Winnie; Leuwaisee, Petal; Cortell, Marilyn; Krishnamachari, Bhuma
Purpose: One in eight people living with an HIV infection in the United States is unaware of their status. Rapid HIV testing (RHT) is an easily used and accepted screening tool that has been introduced in a limited number of clinical settings. The purpose of this study was to investigate patient acceptability, certainty of their decision, and willingness to pay for screening if RHT was offered in university-based dental hygiene clinics.Methods: A cross-sectional survey was administered to 426 patients at three dental hygiene clinics in New York City over a period of four months. The survey questionnaire was based on the decisional conflict scale measuring personal perceptions; with zero indicating extremely high conflict to four indicating no conflict. Patients were assessed for their acceptance of RHT, provider preference for administration of the test and their willingness to pay for RHT.Results: Over half (72.2%) indicated acceptance of HIV testing in a dental hygiene clinic setting; with 85.3% choosing oral RHT, 4.9% fingerstick RHT, and 8.8% venipuncture. Respondents were amenable to testing when offered by dental hygienists (71.7%) and dentists (72.4%). Over 30% indicated their willingness to receive HIV testing in the dental setting when offered at no additional cost. The mean decisional conflict score was 3.42/4.0 indicating no decisional conflict.Conclusions: Patients are willing to undergo oral RHT when offered as a service and provided by dental hygienists in the dental setting. Patients appear to be aware of the benefits and risks associated with RHT. Further research is needed to evaluate the public health benefits and logistical challenges facing the delivery of RHT within in the dental setting.
PMID: 29378805
ISSN: 1553-0205
CID: 3663832

Cheiloscopy: Lip Print Inter-rater Reliability

Furnari, Winnie; Janal, Malvin N
Lip print analysis, or cheiloscopy, has the potential to join fingerprints and retinal scans as an additional method to determine human identification. This preliminary study sought to determine agreement among 20 raters, forensic odontologists, using an often referenced system that categorizes lip prints into six classes related to the dominant pattern of vertical, horizontal, and intersecting lines. Lip prints were taken from 13 individuals, and raters categorized eight distinct regions of each print. In addition to ratings made while viewing the actual prints, the raters repeated the exercise using photographs of the lip prints. Multirater kappa, a chance-corrected measure of agreement, ranged between 0.15 for the actual prints and 0.25 for the photos, indicating only poor to fair levels of inter-rater reliability. While these results fail to support the use of lip prints for human identification, it is possible that more intensive training may yet produce adequate levels of reliability.
PMID: 27907241
ISSN: 1556-4029
CID: 2329672

Effectiveness of peer-to-peer teaching in dental hygiene ethics class : a descriptive analysis

Chapter by: Furnari, Winnie
in: RSE : Research Scholarship Expo by
[S.l. : NYU College of Dentistry], 2016
pp. 044-044
ISBN: n/a
CID: 2889762

Turtle Crossing Ahead

Furnari, Winnie
ORIGINAL:0014794
ISSN: 0279-7720
CID: 4622652

Dental Hygiene Patients' Willingness To Undergo Hiv Testing

Chapter by: Furnari, Winnie; Davide, Susan; Leuwaisee, Petal; Cortell, Marilyn; Santella, Anthony; Krishnamachari, Bhuma
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2015
pp. 17-17
ISBN: n/a
CID: 1872852

Knowledge of HIV, attitudes toward HIV and williness to conduct rapid HIV testing among dental hygienists

Chapter by: Furnari, Winnie; Davide, Susan; Cortell, Marilyn; Krishnamachari, Bhuma; Haden, Sara; Watts, Brandy
in: Clinical & Educational Scholarship Showcase by
[New York NY : NYU College of Dentistry. NYU Academy of Distinguished Educators], 2014
pp. 19-21
ISBN: n/a
CID: 959742

Dental hygienists' knowledge of HIV, attitudes towards people with HIV and willingness to conduct rapid HIV testing

Santella, Aj; Krishnamachari, B; Davide, Sh; Cortell, M; Furnari, W; Watts, B; Haden, Sc
OBJECTIVES: To normalize rapid human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing in the United States, expanded rapid HIV testing initiatives are needed outside the routine medical setting. The dental setting is a logical choice as almost two-thirds of Americans regularly see a dental provider each year. This study was aimed to determine the dental hygienists' knowledge of HIV, attitudes towards people living with HIV and willingness to conduct rapid HIV testing. METHODS: A national cross-sectional survey of practicing dental hygienists and senior dental hygiene students were recruited using state dental hygiene associations, email LISTSERVS, dental hygiene programmes and continuing education conferences (n = 634). RESULTS: The mean knowledge score was 10.5/13. High versus low test-scorers (75% of test questions or more answered correctly versus less than 75% answered correctly) did differ in their comfort level in counselling about sexual HIV prevention methods (P = 0.03) and comfort level in working with medically compromised patients (P = 0.04). CONCLUSION: Dental hygienists, with additional training in HIV prevention counseling and diagnostic testing, may be an appropriate profession to conduct rapid HIV testing.
PMID: 23574762
ISSN: 1601-5029
CID: 611612