Original Article
Year : 2017 | Volume : 2 | Issue : 1 | Page : 13 - 17
Forensic Odontology Acquaintance among the Students of a Dental Institution in Mysore City, India
Sushma Rudraswamy, Nagabhushana Doggalli1, BR Chandrashekar, Maurya Manjunath, HS Sreeshyla2
From the Departments of Public Health Dentistry,1 Oral Medicine and Radiology and 2 Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, JSS Dental College and Hospital, Jagadguru Sri Shivarathreeswara University, Mysuru, Karnataka, India
Abstract
Background:
Forensic odontology utilizes the dentist’s knowledge to serve the judicial system. It has itself as an important indispensable science in medicolegal matters and in particular in personal identification, gender determination, and age estimation. It plays an important role in mass disasters, child abuse, bioterrorism, etc. Taken together, forensic dentistry has become one of valuable tools worldwide to be used in identification processes.
Objective:
To evaluate the knowledge about forensic odontology among the students of a dental institution.
Methodology:
A cross‐sectional study was conducted among final year, interns, and postgraduate students of JSS Dental College and Hospital, Mysuru. A self-administered, structured questionnaire written in English and validated through a pilot survey was given to all available and willing student participants. Questionnaire included significance of dental records, dental age estimation, identification of child abuse and individuals bite marks, as a witness in the court, lip prints along with the demographic data.
Results:
In the present study, 67% of the participants responded that DNA comparison was the most accurate method for person identification. About 27.3% responded tooth dimension and tooth morphology was the most accurate method of dental age estimation in elderly. Moreover, 89.1% reported their present knowledge level/awareness about forensic dentistry was not adequate.
Conclusion:
Forensic odontology must be introduced into the BDS curriculum effectively as a separate subject so that the students get well acquainted with the required knowledge for handling the medicolegal cases in their future practice.
Key Words: Acquaintance, awareness, dental students, forensic dentistry, forensic odontology, knowledge
Financial support and sponsorship
Nil.
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
How to cite this article:
Rudraswamy S, Doggalli N, Chandrashekar BR, Manjunath M, Sreeshyla HS. Forensic odontology acquaintance among the students of a dental institution in Mysore City, India. Int J Forensic Odontol 2017;2:13-7.