JMIR Medical Education (Apr 2023)

A Sex-Specific Evaluation of Dental Students’ Ability to Perform Subgingival Debridement: Randomized Trial

  • Ariadne Charis Frank,
  • Linda Jennrich,
  • Philipp Kanzow,
  • Annette Wiegand,
  • Christiane Krantz-Schäfers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/44989
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. e44989

Abstract

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BackgroundA successful periodontitis treatment demands good manual skills. A correlation between biological sex and dental students’ manual dexterity is currently unknown. ObjectiveThis study examines performance differences between male and female students within subgingival debridement. MethodsA total of 75 third-year dental students were divided by biological sex (male/female) and randomly assigned to one of two work methods (manual curettes n=38; power-driven instruments n=37). Students were trained on periodontitis models for 25 minutes daily over 10 days using the assigned manual or power-driven instrument. Practical training included subgingival debridement of all tooth types on phantom heads. Practical exams were performed after the training session (T1) and after 6 months (T2), and comprised subgingival debridement of four teeth within 20 minutes. The percentage of debrided root surface was assessed and statistically analyzed using a linear mixed-effects regression model (P<.05). ResultsThe analysis is based on 68 students (both groups n=34). The percentage of cleaned surfaces was not significantly different (P=.40) between male (mean 81.6%, SD 18.2%) and female (mean 76.3%, SD 21.1%) students, irrespective of the instrument used. The use of power-driven instruments (mean 81.3%, SD 20.5%) led to significantly better results than the use of manual curettes (mean 75.4%, SD 19.4%; P=.02), and the overall performance decreased over time (T1: mean 84.5%, SD 17.5%; T2: mean 72.3%, SD 20.8%; P<.001). ConclusionsFemale and male students performed equally well in subgingival debridement. Therefore, sex-differentiated teaching methods are not necessary.