2 datasets found
  1. f

    Raw data in excel sheet.

    • datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov
    • plos.figshare.com
    Updated Jan 7, 2025
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    Shrivastava, Deepti; Iqbal, Azhar; Rashed, Asma Abubakar; Attia, Reham Mohmad; Karobari, Mohmed Isaqali; Arjumand, Bilal; Srivastava, Kumar Chandan; Algarni, Hmoud Ali; Alnasser, Muhsen; sultan, Sherif El Sayed; Syed, Jamaluddin; Khattak, Osama; Alonazi, Meshal Aber (2025). Raw data in excel sheet. [Dataset]. https://datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov/dataset?q=0001287111
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    Dataset updated
    Jan 7, 2025
    Authors
    Shrivastava, Deepti; Iqbal, Azhar; Rashed, Asma Abubakar; Attia, Reham Mohmad; Karobari, Mohmed Isaqali; Arjumand, Bilal; Srivastava, Kumar Chandan; Algarni, Hmoud Ali; Alnasser, Muhsen; sultan, Sherif El Sayed; Syed, Jamaluddin; Khattak, Osama; Alonazi, Meshal Aber
    Description

    Background and objectivesAim of the current study was to assess the perception, preference, and practice of endodontists and restorative dentists at different locations around the world about dental magnification instruments.Materials and methodsA multicenter, cross-sectional study was ethically approved from the local committee of bioethics. After thorough literature search, a questionnaire was designed and validated. Later, the questionnaire was distributed to 10% (53 participants) of the total planned participants to conduct a pilot study. Based on the feedback from these participants, any ambiguities or discrepancies observed in the items and content of the questionnaire was modified. The questionnaire was assessed for its internal consistency as part of validating the items with Cronbach’s alpha of 0.80. The completed questionnaire with an informed consent form for the participant was administered to the endodontists and restorative dentists in three different geographical regions namely MENA (Middle East and Northern Africa), British-Isles, and Indian Sub-continent using WhatsApp through the snowball convenience sampling technique.ResultsMajority of the participants were male (56.5%) and in the age group of 25–35 years (30.3%). About 68.9% were from Indian sub-continent, followed by the British-Isles (16.5%) and the least (14.6%) were from the MENA region. By large, the participants of the present study, strongly agreed that dental magnification devices improved ergonomics, quality of work, and should be considered as standard of care in modern endodontic. Flip-up magnifiers (51.1%) and medium (8x-16x) magnification were preferred by majority of the participants. About 46.3% of specialist reported that they always used devices for all operative and endodontic procedures, especially while locating hidden and canals and negotiating calcified canals. Participants practicing in British-Isles have 2.42 times (P<0.05) higher adequate perception with reference participants in Indian sub-continent. Additionally, participants with fellowship have 2.77 times more (P<0.01) adequate perception with reference to their counterparts with a master’s degree.ConclusionsMost of the participants believe that dental magnification devices enhance the prognosis and quality of treatment of possibly all operative and endodontics procedures. Thus, emphasized on the inclusion of devices in the postgraduate curriculum and signifies the role of continuing dental education for specialist and dental assistant handling devices. However, multicenter studies with larger sample is required for generalizing the results.

  2. f

    The psychometric properties of the scale.

    • plos.figshare.com
    xls
    Updated Jan 7, 2025
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    Azhar Iqbal; Mohmed Isaqali Karobari; Deepti Shrivastava; Kumar Chandan Srivastava; Bilal Arjumand; Hmoud Ali Algarni; Meshal Aber Alonazi; Muhsen Alnasser; Osama Khattak; Jamaluddin Syed; Reham Mohmad Attia; Asma Abubakar Rashed; Sherif El Sayed sultan (2025). The psychometric properties of the scale. [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0311391.t005
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    xlsAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 7, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    PLOS ONE
    Authors
    Azhar Iqbal; Mohmed Isaqali Karobari; Deepti Shrivastava; Kumar Chandan Srivastava; Bilal Arjumand; Hmoud Ali Algarni; Meshal Aber Alonazi; Muhsen Alnasser; Osama Khattak; Jamaluddin Syed; Reham Mohmad Attia; Asma Abubakar Rashed; Sherif El Sayed sultan
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Background and objectivesAim of the current study was to assess the perception, preference, and practice of endodontists and restorative dentists at different locations around the world about dental magnification instruments.Materials and methodsA multicenter, cross-sectional study was ethically approved from the local committee of bioethics. After thorough literature search, a questionnaire was designed and validated. Later, the questionnaire was distributed to 10% (53 participants) of the total planned participants to conduct a pilot study. Based on the feedback from these participants, any ambiguities or discrepancies observed in the items and content of the questionnaire was modified. The questionnaire was assessed for its internal consistency as part of validating the items with Cronbach’s alpha of 0.80. The completed questionnaire with an informed consent form for the participant was administered to the endodontists and restorative dentists in three different geographical regions namely MENA (Middle East and Northern Africa), British-Isles, and Indian Sub-continent using WhatsApp through the snowball convenience sampling technique.ResultsMajority of the participants were male (56.5%) and in the age group of 25–35 years (30.3%). About 68.9% were from Indian sub-continent, followed by the British-Isles (16.5%) and the least (14.6%) were from the MENA region. By large, the participants of the present study, strongly agreed that dental magnification devices improved ergonomics, quality of work, and should be considered as standard of care in modern endodontic. Flip-up magnifiers (51.1%) and medium (8x-16x) magnification were preferred by majority of the participants. About 46.3% of specialist reported that they always used devices for all operative and endodontic procedures, especially while locating hidden and canals and negotiating calcified canals. Participants practicing in British-Isles have 2.42 times (P

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Shrivastava, Deepti; Iqbal, Azhar; Rashed, Asma Abubakar; Attia, Reham Mohmad; Karobari, Mohmed Isaqali; Arjumand, Bilal; Srivastava, Kumar Chandan; Algarni, Hmoud Ali; Alnasser, Muhsen; sultan, Sherif El Sayed; Syed, Jamaluddin; Khattak, Osama; Alonazi, Meshal Aber (2025). Raw data in excel sheet. [Dataset]. https://datasetcatalog.nlm.nih.gov/dataset?q=0001287111

Raw data in excel sheet.

Explore at:
Dataset updated
Jan 7, 2025
Authors
Shrivastava, Deepti; Iqbal, Azhar; Rashed, Asma Abubakar; Attia, Reham Mohmad; Karobari, Mohmed Isaqali; Arjumand, Bilal; Srivastava, Kumar Chandan; Algarni, Hmoud Ali; Alnasser, Muhsen; sultan, Sherif El Sayed; Syed, Jamaluddin; Khattak, Osama; Alonazi, Meshal Aber
Description

Background and objectivesAim of the current study was to assess the perception, preference, and practice of endodontists and restorative dentists at different locations around the world about dental magnification instruments.Materials and methodsA multicenter, cross-sectional study was ethically approved from the local committee of bioethics. After thorough literature search, a questionnaire was designed and validated. Later, the questionnaire was distributed to 10% (53 participants) of the total planned participants to conduct a pilot study. Based on the feedback from these participants, any ambiguities or discrepancies observed in the items and content of the questionnaire was modified. The questionnaire was assessed for its internal consistency as part of validating the items with Cronbach’s alpha of 0.80. The completed questionnaire with an informed consent form for the participant was administered to the endodontists and restorative dentists in three different geographical regions namely MENA (Middle East and Northern Africa), British-Isles, and Indian Sub-continent using WhatsApp through the snowball convenience sampling technique.ResultsMajority of the participants were male (56.5%) and in the age group of 25–35 years (30.3%). About 68.9% were from Indian sub-continent, followed by the British-Isles (16.5%) and the least (14.6%) were from the MENA region. By large, the participants of the present study, strongly agreed that dental magnification devices improved ergonomics, quality of work, and should be considered as standard of care in modern endodontic. Flip-up magnifiers (51.1%) and medium (8x-16x) magnification were preferred by majority of the participants. About 46.3% of specialist reported that they always used devices for all operative and endodontic procedures, especially while locating hidden and canals and negotiating calcified canals. Participants practicing in British-Isles have 2.42 times (P<0.05) higher adequate perception with reference participants in Indian sub-continent. Additionally, participants with fellowship have 2.77 times more (P<0.01) adequate perception with reference to their counterparts with a master’s degree.ConclusionsMost of the participants believe that dental magnification devices enhance the prognosis and quality of treatment of possibly all operative and endodontics procedures. Thus, emphasized on the inclusion of devices in the postgraduate curriculum and signifies the role of continuing dental education for specialist and dental assistant handling devices. However, multicenter studies with larger sample is required for generalizing the results.

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