Research Article
Dentistry: Open Access
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ISSN: 2161-1122
OPEN ACCESS Freely available online
Dentistry, Vol. 10 Iss. 7 No: 569 1
ABSTRACT
Background: The pandemic of Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) has tremendously affected dentistry as a whole.
With increasing COVID-19 cases in India, hospitals and doctors have been facing the brunt of the crisis. While government
hospitals treating COVID-19 are limited, private hospitals are charging unimaginable rates. It has become the biggest challenge
to accommodate the increasing number of cases. Dentists have been confined to their homes, due to the high risk nature of
the profession. Dentistry has become one of the peak professions at risk of transmission of the virus. With this increase in risk,
dental profession is facing heavy fallout and dentists all over the country are concerned about the effects of this pandemic on
the future of dentistry.
Aim: This survey aims to analyze the concerns associated with COVID-19 among the dental surgeons of Maharashtra.
Methodology: A sample of 208 participants (dentists) was taken after assessing the sample size within the age group of 25-45
years of age. The participants comprised of dentists practicing in various parts of Maharashtra. A questionnaire was created on
Google forms and circulated to participants using various social media platforms. The data of responses of participants were
analyzed and evaluated with the help of pie charts.
Results: This survey analyzed the major concerns of dental surgeons and tried to evaluate the various areas of anxiety. Majority
of the participants believed that dentists were at higher risk of contracting the virus than any other healthcare professionals and
they also would be a major reason for transmitting the infection to their patients. The also believed the fact that wearing Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE) did not guarantee them safety against the virus. Majority of the dentists felt that the pandemic
has affected dentistry as a career and that practicing dentistry amidst COVID-19 was not safe. However, the participants were
also of the opinion that, the pandemic did not turn dentistry into any less of a lucrative branch. The participants asserted
that changing PPE after every patient was mandatory and that the patients should be charged an extra amount for the same.
The most highlighting feature of this study was that COVID-19 affected the monetary income of majority of the dentists,
considerably reduced their patient flow and most of them reported of working for lesser hours per day due to the pandemic.
Conclusion: This questionnaire based survey clearly helped in assessing the common concerns among the dental surgeons of
Maharashtra associated with COVID-19. Although the pandemic posed various drawbacks and threats to the profession of
dentistry, it still stands out being one of the most lucrative specialties of healthcare.
Keywords: Oral hygiene; Paediatric dentistry; Prosthodontology and periodontology; Endodontology; Cosmetic dentistry/
restorative dentistry
COVID-19 and Associated Concerns among Dental Surgeons of
Maharashtra-A Questionnaire Based Survey
Bhushan Jawale
1
, Lishoy Rodrigues
1
*, Sameer Patil
1
, Kashmira Gurav
2
1
Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, Sinhgad Dental College and Hospital, Sinhgad, Pune, Maharashtra, India;
2
Department of
Public Health Dentistry, Sinhgad Dental College and Hospital, Sinhgad, Pune, Maharashtra, India
*Correspondence to: Lishoy Rodrigues, Department of Orthodontics and Dentofacial Orthopedics, Sinhgad Dental College and Hospital, Pune,
Maharashtra, India, Telephone: +919975444631; E-mail: lishoy95@gmail.com
Received: August 3, 2020; Accepted: September 17, 2020; Published: September 24, 2020
Citation: Jawale B, Rodrigues L, Patil S, Gurav K (2020) COVID-19 and Associated Concerns among Dental Surgeons of Maharashtra–A Questionnaire
Based Survey. Dentistry 10:569. doi: 10.35248/2161-1122.20.10.569
Copyright: ©2020 Jawale B et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits
unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
INTRODUCTION
Dentistry is facing its darkest hour yet, with the growth and spread
of the coronavirus pandemic. Dental surgeons are at the highest
risk of contracting and transmitting the coronavirus, alongside
paramedics, nurses, and other healthcare workers. Dental
clinics across the country have been shut for over five months.
With the pandemic still on the growth curve, there is no hope
of revival anytime soon, compounded by zero earnings by dental
practitioners and staff at clinics. An unprecedented outbreak of
pneumonia of unknown etiology in Wuhan City, Hubei province
in China emerged in December 2019. A novel coronavirus was
identified as the causative agent and was subsequently termed