Dental student practising 

A review led by the Âé¶¹´«Ã½ has shown that dentists suffer an increased level of stress and burnout – but not enough is known about their colleagues in the wider dental team.

Written in collaboration with the University of Southampton, the analysed research from the last 14 years on mental health in dental professionals.

The review was commissioned by the General Dental Council to better understand the extent to which dental professionals experience mental health problems and the conditions that contribute to mental and emotional distress.

The work concluded that dentists suffer an increased level of stress and burnout, particularly general dental practitioners, with litigation and regulation the main stressors. It also noted an increase in the number of dentists showing signs of burnout over the 14-year period.

However, the review showed there is little or no research on the wellbeing of dental care professionals, such as dental nurses, dental hygienists and dental therapists.

The review also showed a lack of research or evaluation on mental health support interventions with dental professionals in mind – and lead author, Anastasios Plessas from Peninsula Dental School at the Âé¶¹´«Ã½, hoped that the review would inspire more work in the area.

Lead author, Anastasios Plessas, said: 

“Conducting a review means that you find and analyse the research that already exists, and the truth is that there isn’t enough evidence around mental health in dental professionals, or whether certain interventions work. We also note the need to test bespoke interventions that recognised the range of settings and system-related issues in dentistry.
“Some of the studies that we found suggested that poor mental health may lead to practitioners being less clinically confident and potentially impact treatment decisions. However, further empirical studies need to happen before anyone can know if and how poor mental health and wellbeing impacts on dental teams’ performance and patient safety.