A new research questioned why the same safety standards that apply to pilots cannot be used for dentists too since both professions have little room for error
A new research questioned why the same safety standards that apply to pilots cannot be used for dentists too since both professions have little room for error.
Russell Taichman, U-M dentistry professor Michigan and two pilot-dentists believe that implementing this theory would drastically reduce human errors.Crew Resource Management empowers team members to actively participate to enhance safety using forward thinking strategies, said Taichman.
"Using checklists makes for a safer, more standardized routine of dental surgery in my practice," said David Sarment, a pilot and a dentist.
CRM checklists in the dentist's office are an inevitable change, said co-author Harold Pinsky, also a dentist and full time pilot.
"If I'm doing a restoration and my assistant sees saliva leaking, in the old days the assistant would think to themselves, 'The doctor is king, he or she must know what's going on.'"
But if all team members have a CRM checklist, the assistant is empowered to tell the doctor if there is a problem.
Advertisement
For the next step, the co-authors hope to design a small clinical trial in the dental school to test CRM, Taichman said.
Advertisement
Source-ANI