Dental Ethics -- "No Antibiotics Term Paper

PAGES
2
WORDS
580
Cite

The patient would then have the autonomous right to demand antibiotics from the general practitioner. Fourth, the dentist's preferred practice is not relevant in this dilemma and could not, for example, justify prescribing antibiotics where the potential negative consequences of their use outweighed their purpose. With respect to this principle, the combined application of principles 1 through 3 would override most concerns or rights arising in connection with Principle 4. Fifth, aesthetic values are equally inapplicable to this particular dilemma. Finally, sixth, resource efficiency also militates for the use of prophylactic antibiotics. By comparison, the cost savings attributable to the avoidance of a single instance of preventable bacterial infection could be anywhere from ten times to several thousands of times the cost of providing prophylactic antibiotic treatment before surgery. Together with...

...

The former would emphasize the fact that the essential purpose of the dentist is to prevent harm (i.e. infection) to the patient; the latter would emphasize the fact that wider adoption of the dentist's position as public policy would benefit society more than the general practitioner's position expressed in public policy.
Proposed Course of Action and Resolution

To protect the health and welfare of his patient in this case, the dentist has no ethical choice but to respond proactively and to escalate his advocacy of good clinical practice as high as might be necessary to protect his patient. First, he might counsel the patient and provide sufficient objective factual information for the patient

Cite this Document:

"Dental Ethics -- No Antibiotics" (2010, November 03) Retrieved April 19, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/dental-ethics-no-antibiotics-11948

"Dental Ethics -- No Antibiotics" 03 November 2010. Web.19 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/dental-ethics-no-antibiotics-11948>

"Dental Ethics -- No Antibiotics", 03 November 2010, Accessed.19 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/dental-ethics-no-antibiotics-11948

Related Documents
Dental Case Study
PAGES 3 WORDS 991

Dental Case Study The patient in the case that is presented is a Latino male just over 13 years old. He has sickle cell anemia, and suffers from an intellectual disability. This paper reviews the case study from a dental health perspective. What is sickle cell anemia? The genesis of this disease is found within the abnormal hemoglobin in the blood stream; the red blood cells that carry oxygen throughout the body

Dental Amalgam
PAGES 6 WORDS 2014

Dental Amalgam: The Risks and Alternatives Some of the most common dental restorative materials currently in use are dental amalgams, but these compounds contain approximately 50% mercury making their use controversial, particularly with young children who may be harmed by long-term exposure. Although there are some viable composite resin alternatives available, dental amalgams with mercury remain the treatment of choice for many practitioners. To determine the current risks and potential alternatives

Dental Assistance (dental Surgery) I started out as a dental assistant at 19, then became an instructor, and was promoted to a program director before opening my own teaching program in 2000. I work part time at a community college and teach my dental auxiliary courses on the weekends. In that way, I have an extensive background of practice, reflection, observation, and application that is connected to my job. Since I

In general, studies of commercial resin matrixes indicate volumetric shrinkage in the curing process as great as seven percent, with most undergoing shrinkage of two or three percent (Seghatol & Durand, 1999). In dentistry, the comparatively small dimensions of the products composed of polymers and the specific point-load stresses sometimes encountered by dentures magnifies the undesirable effects of even small percentages of incomplete polymerization and volumetric shrinkage. Moreover, dental materials

Dental Care The purpose of rhetoric's is to persuade the reader to accept the authors' point-of-view. To that end, the authors take great pains in constructing their argument with emotion and pathos and certain structural stylistic skills that, he thinks, will best persuade the readers and grab their attention. Certain articles have to be written in a more authoritative tone than others, and other articles may have to be crafted in

Dental Care in Ethnic Populations Over 65 Borrell, L.N., Burt, B.A., and Neighbors, H.W. (2004, May). Social Factors and Periodontitis in an Older Population. American Journal Public Health. 94(5), 748 -- 754. PMCID: PMC1448332 This article discusses the relationship between age, ethnicity, socio-economic status, and educational level with respect to oral dental health and particularly focuses on periodontitis. Research and conventional wisdom have long pointed to poorer health outcomes for people with