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1.
Medical Principles and Practice. 2014; 23 (Supp. 1): 10-16
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-161523

ABSTRACT

The Faculty of Dentistry, Kuwait University, was designated as a World Health Organization [WHO] Collaborating Centre for Primary Oral Health Care [POHC] in 2011. This article aimed to describe the following: [1] the background for this nomination, [2] the WHO Collaborating Centre for POHC, its terms of reference and 5 activities, [3] the primary health care concept as it was established in Alma-Ata, [4] the oral health situation in Kuwait and in the Middle-East region and, finally, [5] how POHC policy should be implemented in Kuwait and this region. It can be concluded that, because the caries experience is very high in Kuwait and in the other countries of the Eastern Mediterranean region, good POHC programmes should be designed and implemented in this region. The Faculty of Dentistry will strengthen its research tradition and as a WHO Collaborating Centre for POHC will try to collect information and experience from POHC in this region and exchange ideas between POHC experts in this region on how these programmes could be further developed. This will happen according to the terms of reference and activity plans of the WHO Collaborating Centre for POHC approved by the WHO Global Oral Health Programme

2.
Medical Principles and Practice. 2003; 12 (Supp. 1): 51-55
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-63910

ABSTRACT

For a long time there has been a need to establish a dental school in Kuwait, due to the fact that the majority of dentists working in Kuwait are expatriates from various countries. An Amiri decree in 1996 made it possible, and the first dental students were admitted to the Kuwait University Faculty of Dentistry in 1998. The mission of the Faculty of Dentistry is 'to promote oral health in Kuwait through education, research and cooperation with other professional health care institutions as well as the community at large'. A 6.5-year dental curriculum was completed after 2 years of committee work and was accepted by the University Council in 2001. This curriculum incorporates current trends in medical and dental education, such as the evidence-based and community-based approaches, problem-solving methodology for outcome-based learning, and competency achieved through comprehensive patient care


Subject(s)
Dental Care , Education, Dental/organization & administration , Curriculum , Community Dentistry , Preventive Dentistry , Oral Health , Comprehensive Dental Care , Evidence-Based Medicine
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