Cultura

Cultural Sensitivity In Oral And Maxillofacial Surgery: The Ethical Role Of Dental Assistants In Dental Modification Practices

VOLUME 22, 2025

The Role of Targeted Infra-popliteal Endovascular Angioplasty to Treat Diabetic Foot Ulcers Using the Angiosome Model: A Systematic Review

VOLUME 6, 2023

Baylasan Ali Alsamadani, Albatul Hassan Abdullah, Zekra Khalid Alnahari, Wejdan Mubarak Alenazi, Faisal Mohammed Alshahrani
Abdulrahman Hussain Alqahtani, Asia Mohammed Bashiriah, Alanoud Mohammed Albaydhani, Anoud Fahad Alanazi, Maryam Ali Awaji

Abstract

Dental modification has long been recognized within dental anthropology as a culturally embedded practice that conveys meanings related to identity, social belonging, aesthetics, and values rather than pathology or disease. In contemporary dental settings, such practices often intersect with biomedical norms, creating ethical challenges that require cultural sensitivity and moral awareness. While ethical discussions in dentistry have traditionally focused on dentists, the role of dental assistants in navigating these culturally sensitive encounters remains underexplored.

This article adopts a cultural, ethical, and axiological perspective to examine the ethical role of dental assistants in dental practices involving culturally rooted dental modification. Drawing on literature from dental anthropology, bioethics, and people-centred care frameworks, the analysis positions dental assistants as key moral and cultural agents within everyday dental practice. Their close interaction with patients situates them at the forefront of communication, interpretation, and ethical mediation between institutional standards and patients’ cultural narratives.

The article argues that dental assistants contribute significantly to ethical practice by safeguarding patient dignity, supporting cultural recognition, and preventing symbolic or cultural harm. Through language, documentation, and interpersonal engagement, they translate abstract ethical principles—such as respect for autonomy, non-maleficence, and justice—into lived professional practice. Recognizing their ethical agency challenges hierarchical models of responsibility in dentistry and supports a more inclusive understanding of moral practice in healthcare.

By foregrounding the ethical and cultural dimensions of dental assisting, this study contributes to broader philosophical discussions on culture, values, and everyday ethics in health professions. It concludes that integrating cultural sensitivity into the professional identity and education of dental assistants is essential for fostering humane, inclusive, and ethically responsive dental care.

Keywords : Cultural sensitivity; Dental assistants; Dental modification; Ethics; Axiology; Dental anthropology.
Erin Saricilar
Lecture in accounting. University of Basrah, College of Administration and Economics, Department of Accounting.

Abstract

Atherosclerotic disease significantly impacts patients with type 2 diabetes, who often present with recalcitrant peripheral ulcers. The angiosome model of the foot presents an opportunity to perform direct angiosome-targeted endovascular interventions to maximise both wound healing and limb salvage. A systematic review was performed, with 17 studies included in the final review. Below-the-knee endovascular interventions present significant technical challenges, with technical success depending on the length of lesion being treated and the number of angiosomes that require treatment. Wound healing was significantly improved with direct angiosome-targeted angioplasty, as was limb salvage, with a significant increase in survival without major amputation. Indirect angioplasty, where the intervention is applied to collateral vessels to the angiosomes, yielded similar results to direct angiosome-targeted angioplasty. Applying the angiosome model of the foot in direct angiosome-targeted angioplasty improves outcomes for patients with recalcitrant diabetic foot ulcers in terms of primary wound healing, mean time for complete wound healing and major amputation-free survival.
Keywords : Diabetic foot ulcer, angiosome, angioplasty