As women enter the dental profession in increasing numbers in North America and around the world, the questions of how they perceive their environment and what kind of barriers they face are important subjects to be addressed. The aim of this study was to assess and compare women dental students’ perceptions of bias in their environment and experiences of sexual misconduct at one dental school in each of four countries. In spring 2017, 1,293 female students at four dental schools in the U.S., Bulgaria, Brazil, and India were invited to participate in a 24‐item survey developed by researchers from the four countries; 990 students responded (response rate 76.6%). The overall majority of the respondents reported thinking the admissions process at their school was fair (79.7%); but a fifth of U.S. and Brazilian students perceived their school was not fully embracing of females, with most Bulgarian students agreeing (87.2%) and all Indian students disagreeing. Most respondents overall perceived that male faculty members did not favor male students (79.5%) and did not think there was discrimination against female students by faculty (87.1%), but half of the U.S. respondents reported feeling discriminated against by both male faculty and male students. When the responses “I've been verbally harassed” and “I've been somewhat verbally harassed” were combined, 10.1% of the U.S. respondents reported verbal harassment, compared to 20% of Brazilian, 15% of Bulgarian, and 2% of Indian respondents. When the responses “I've been sexually assaulted” and “I've been somewhat sexually assaulted” were combined, 6% of U.S. respondents reported being sexually assaulted, compared to 6.2% of Brazilian, 2.5% of Bulgarian, and none of the Indian respondents. Almost half (46.9%) of these students overall perceived their school was not or only somewhat vigilant about issues of sexual misconduct, and only 54% said they would feel comfortable or very comfortable reporting misconduct. These results suggest that academic dental institutions in all four countries need improvements to make their environments more equitable and free of bias and sexual misconduct.
The study suggests that dental students would value international exchanges, which may enhance students' knowledge and self-awareness related to cultural competence.
Since the earliest days of the specialty, Orthodontists have sought to avoid the reciprocal nature of forces. This quest has fostered many schemes that purport to defy the physical realities of Newton's Law. The term "anchorage" is usually applied to the resistive value of the posterior teeth to a force that would produce mesial tooth movement. The mechanism by which these retroactive forces are countered is known as "anchorage control".The anchorage value of posterior teeth in the antero-posterior and vertical direction appear to be higher in lingual orthodontics (than in labial orthodontics) as the forces applied to the anterior teeth are lingual to the center of resistance and distally rotating forces on molars are constantly applied during en-masse retraction. This paper presents a case report of a 30 yrs old male patient with Class I Bimaxillary Protrusion treated using innovative lingual forces with a labial appliance (without any additional intraoral or extraoral anchorage devices) effectively with negligible anchorage loss.
The biodegradation of fenitrothion (an organophosphorus pesticide) in garden soil of western Uttar Pradesh in northern India has been studied. Both natural and autoclaved soil were treated with 10 p.p.m. of fenitrothion at field capacity moisture and incubated for 90 days in glass containers at 25 and 40°C. The soil samples were collected at various intervals between 0 and 90 days and analysed by HPLC for the residual pesticide and metabolites formed. At 0 days the recovery of the pesticide was 98% and the pesticide then degraded linearly with incubation time. The concentration of pesticide in the natural soil decreased with incubation time with concomitant formation of two metabolites at 25°C and three metabolites at 40°C. These metabolites were purified to homogeneity by HPLC and characterized by IR spectroscopy. The results showed oxidative desulphuration of the pesticide at the first step followed by hydrolytic cleavage of P-0-aryl linkage and demetbylation at the second and third step, respectively.
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