I'm a dentist.
I'm sure you all know that medicine is an extremely diverse science that includes every single aspect of the body (mouth included). If it's related to the human body, it's part of medicine.
Not so with dentistry. Dentistry is defined as the evaluation, diagnosis, prevention and/or treatment (nonsurgical, surgical or related procedures) of diseases, disorders and/or conditions of the oral cavity, maxillofacial area and/or the adjacent and associated structures and their impact on the human body.
Hence, while a practicing dentist must know at minimum something about virtually every area of medicine, dentistry itself is limited to the head and neck (and mind you, only one dental specialist--oral surgeons--treat areas outside of the oral cavity).
Does a profession treating a very specific area of the body need to have NINE different specialists?
A doc for the gums. A doc for the roots. A doc for crowns. A doc for fillings. A doc for braces, etc. etc.
2007-03-25
09:52:24
·
2 answers
·
asked by
Anonymous
in
Health
➔ Dental