PJMHS 2021
DOI: 10.53350/pjmhs211581988
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Receptiveness of Maintaining Dental Records for Forensic and Other Matters

Abstract: Background: Dental records assume a significant part as these might be utilized in identification of dead or missing humans, as proof in court and in criminological dentistry as discoveries of posthumous assessments are contrasted with antemortem dental evidence that have been well-maintained. Aim: To evaluate the awareness regarding significance of dental records and receptiveness of the practitioner toward maintenance in proper pattern. Method: This cross sectional descriptive was carried out between Septemb… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(2 citation statements)
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“…42,60 Most public centres still employ paper-based dental records systems, despite eHealth strategies. 61 The development of digital dental records will alleviate the abovementioned administrative and clinical challenges. Data received from the platform will raise awareness and priority for oral health, enable the formulation of additional digital regulatory frameworks, and encourage innovation and adaptive management.…”
Section: Digital Transformation In Records-intensive Services Sectors...mentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…42,60 Most public centres still employ paper-based dental records systems, despite eHealth strategies. 61 The development of digital dental records will alleviate the abovementioned administrative and clinical challenges. Data received from the platform will raise awareness and priority for oral health, enable the formulation of additional digital regulatory frameworks, and encourage innovation and adaptive management.…”
Section: Digital Transformation In Records-intensive Services Sectors...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reports from developing countries allude to paper-based records as the most predominant records and storage modality. 60,61 The predominancy of paper-based records may result from convenience, affordability and lack of homegrown technological solutions. Two studies in India found that most dentists still used pre-printed forms: 53% (n=38) and 62.8% (n=242) of dentists, with only 56.2% keeping the dental records for future retrieval.…”
Section: Digital Transformation In Records-intensive Services Sectors...mentioning
confidence: 99%