David H Felix
Glasgow Dental Hospital and School
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Publication
Featured researches published by David H Felix.
Journal of Infection | 1994
Sheila M. Gore; David H Felix; A. Graham Bird; David Wray
This retrospective study used a postal questionnaire to measure occupational risks and to assess infection control procedures among 310 dental practitioners. The study comprised general dental practices in the Lothian region of Scotland, Lothian Health Board Community Dental Service and Edinburgh Dental Hospital. Altogether, 217 dental practitioners responded by the due date giving recall of inoculation injuries within the previous 5 years and infection control measures employed. The study revealed that 191 practitioners (88%) had completed a course of hepatitis B vaccination but one-third of them had not been tested for post-vaccination antibody. In 1991, two thirds of dentists (66%: 137 of 207 respondents) wore the same pair of gloves, and 80% of dentists (142 of 177 respondents) wore the same mask, for dealing with more than one patient. The usual practice was to change gloves during sessions (44%: out of 71 dentists) and to change masks for each session or less often (75%: 73 out of 97 dentists). The proportion of dentists who never used gloves fell from 56% in 1981 to 1% in 1991. An autoclave was used for sterilisation by 85% of practitioners in 1991. Reported non-sterile inoculation injuries averaged 1.7 (S.D. = 3.2) injuries per dentist in the previous year with 56% of practitioners having had an injury. The average was 6.8 (S.D. = 15.9) injuries per dentist in the previous 5 years with 76% of practitioners having had an injury. Of recent non-sterile inoculation injuries described by dental practitioners, 30% constituted a moderate or high risk of transmission of infection to the practitioner (43 of 141 described injuries). Combined with HIV seroprevalance rates, probabilities of transmission and numbers of practising dentists, the mean reported number of non-sterile inoculation injuries in the previous 5 years may be used to provide estimates of expected numbers of dental practitioners occupationally infected with HIV in the previous 5 years. U.K. estimates were 0.004 dentists in Lothian region and 0.05 dentists in the Thames region occupationally infected with HIV in the previous five years. Non-sterile inoculation injuries appear to be a common hazard of dental practice. In any year, most dentists are exposed to the risk of blood-borne viral infection. Despite a high reported incidence of such injuries, dental practice within the U.K. appears to carry a low risk of acquiring HIV infection from occupational exposure.
Oral Diseases | 2011
Helen Rogers; Thomas P. Sollecito; David H Felix; Juan F. Yepes; Mark Williams; Joseph D’Ambrosio; Tim Hodgson; Linda Prescott-Clements; David Wray; Alexander Ross Kerr
OBJECTIVES The aim of this preliminary study was to investigate postgraduate Oral Medicine training worldwide and to begin to identify minimum requirements and/or core content for an International Oral Medicine curriculum. MATERIALS AND METHODS Countries where there was believed to be postgraduate training in Oral Medicine were identified by the working group. Standardized emails were sent inviting participants to complete an online survey regarding the scope of postgraduate training in Oral Medicine in their respective countries. RESULTS We received 69 total responses from 37 countries. Of these, 22 countries self-identified as having postgraduate Oral Medicine as a distinct field of study, and they served as the study group. While there is currently considerable variation among Oral Medicine postgraduate training parameters, there is considerable congruency in clinical content of the Oral Medicine syllabi. For example, all of the training programs responded that they did evaluate competence in diagnosis and management of oral mucosal disease. CONCLUSIONS This preliminary study provides the first evidence regarding international Oral Medicine postgraduate training, from which recommendations for an international core curriculum could be initiated. It is through such an initiative that a universal clinical core syllabus in postgraduate Oral Medicine training may be more feasible.
Cancer Research | 2002
Fiona McGregor; Alessandra Muntoni; Janis Fleming; Judith Brown; David H Felix; D. Gordon MacDonald; E. Kenneth Parkinson; Paul Harrison
Cancer Research | 1997
Fiona McGregor; Eric Wagner; David H Felix; David Soutar; Kenneth Parkinson; Paul Harrison
Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 2000
Richard J. Oliver; D. Gordon MacDonald; David H Felix
Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 2001
Crispian Scully; Antonio Mano Azul; Alexander Crighton; David H Felix; Anne Field; Stephen Porter
Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 1993
David H Felix; David Wray
Journal of Oral Pathology & Medicine | 2007
K. S. Staines; R. Green; David H Felix
Journal of Dental Education | 2013
Thomas P. Sollecito; Helen Rogers; Linda Prescott-Clements; David H Felix; A. Ross Kerr; David Wray; Penelope Shirlaw; Michael T. Brennan; Martin S. Greenberg; Eric T. Stoopler
Dental update | 2012
David H Felix; Jane Luker; Crispian Scully