THE INCOMING PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS
PRESIDENT'S VALEDICTORY ADDRESS AT THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
4th EAPD CONGRESS
COMMENTS ON EAPD CONSTITUTION AND BYELAWS
RECOGNITION OF PEADIATRIC DENTISTRY AS SPECIALTY IN UK
THE EVOLUTION OF CHILDREN'S DENTISTRY IN EUROPE OVER THE LAST 200 YEARS
A BRIEF HISTORY OF PAEDIATRIC DENTISTRY IN GREECE
ADVERTISING
THE
INCOMING PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS
Dear
Colleagues, Dear Friends
I'm
very honoured at being installed as
the new President of the European Academy of Paediatric Dentistry. I would like
to thank the Board members and all the councillors and their backing groups for
their support and their confidence in me.
As
the incoming President, I'm very grateful to the past President with whom I
worked together on the Board for the past
eight yeras. Constantine
Oulis isn't my brother yet, but he became almost family. The more we argued
recently by electronic mail the closer became our friendship. Thank you
Constantine.
The past President pointed out at the
assembly during the past Congress that the Academy gave him more than he put in;
I feel this was too 'modest' of him. I know that a lot of energy was put in the
Academy by initiating a lot of ideas and novelties. As he wrote to the
Councillors in your latest letter, the reluctance to finish things holds the
Academy back. This will be the greatest challenge for me in running the Academy.
I
will take care of the pending task, assuring you that we will finalise several
initiatives already begun. Moreover, I'm sure that you will still put a lot of
energy into the Academy. I will try to have a more regular contact with all
Councillors as was requested in the most recent questionnaire they were sent,
but, on the other hand, I strongly count on all Councillors. There is a need for
active participation and I will develop new initiatives in due course to reach
that goal. In the next two years we have to focus on several other major goals
of which the recognition of the Speciality is the most important.
I would like to
finish this first presidential message by thanking Professor Giuliano Falcolini
for organising the 4th EAPD Congress. As chairman of the Scientific
Committee, we worked very closely and succeeded to finalise a high quality
scientific programme. Another thanks to Doctors Campus and Lumbau, Mr and Mrs
invisible ... I know it was a nightmare. It will remain a mystery to me how the
Organising Committee succeeded in printing the abstract book and the programme
book. Giuliano. - On the one hand you didn't receive the expected number of
attendees, on the other hand I feel most of us agree that the scientific content
was very good and this is always the first and most important goal of any
congress. The unfortunate mistake you made was the absence of the sun but maybe
you didn't find enough sponsorship for that.
Giuliano, I know you worked very
hard for this congress and the scientific content will forever be in the
libraries thanks to your new Italian Journal of Paediatric Dentistry for which I
would like to congratulate you very much.
My dear friends, we will leave Sardinia now. We are looking forward to Bergen
(Norway) in 2000. We move from the rain to .... more rain?
I'm really looking forward to working with MAGNE RAADAL
the next Congress
Organiser and President-Elect during the next two years. It will be my pleasure
to lead this Academy up to its 5th Congress and to its 10th anniversary which we
should celebrate in BERGEN.
Dear fiends, let us leave with a warm feeling for the Academy and a strong
belief in the Board and Council in their attempt to make Paediatric Dentistry a
strong specialiy in Europe.
(From
the new President's address at the closing ceremony).
Porto
Cervo, Sardinia
Luc C Martens
PRESIDENT'S
VALEDICTORY ADDRESS
AT THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
Dear
Colleagues and members of our Academy, dear friends,
I
am very pleased as President, and on behalf of the Board and the Council to
welcome you to this Biennial General Assembly of our Academy.
Traditionally with the end of our Biennial Congress. we reach the end of our
two-year Academy assignment periods. It is time therefore, to look at what we
have accomplished. There
were three areas of focus planning and action that defined the goals of my
Presidency:
1.
The
forwarding and, if possible, completion of the Pending Tasks.
2.
The
internal re-evaluation and strengthening of our infrastructure.
3.
Increased
and more effective communication with the public and our members.
Proposals
for each issue were prepared and submitted to the Executive Committee. After
many hours of preparation and collaboration among the Executive members, all
these important issues for the existence - better organisation - and effective
action of our Academy were issued and forwarded to the Council for their
approval.
Among our first priorities were the restructuring of the Constitution
to comply with the EU standards, and the development of the first drafts of the
accreditation and quality assurance standards. All three proposals were
completed and distributed thanks to the hard work of the Coordinators:
Professors Hoskuldsson, Dahloff and Dr. Edkman, and the members of the
Constitution. Accreditation and Quality Assurance committees
respectively.
We are
deeply indebted to all for their marvellous work and we will be delighted to
have the coordinators of these committees present all these proposals to the
General Assembly expecting your final approval. As the Academy has been growing
there has been an increasing need to identify our members and the development of
a membership card and a certificate was necessary. Further to the above, and in
order to strengthen and develop our functioning, I thought that we needed to
have some standards to go by and the Council charged me to proceed with the
development of a document on the Standing Orders and policies of our Academy,
which I prepared in collaboration with Professor Martens. On the other hand, if
the EAPD wants to meet the future and evolve, the link to the Internet is the
solution. In collaboration with Professor Raadal, we were assigned to prepare a
proposal on how the Academy can develop a WWW Page on the Internet. Both
proposals are also completed waiting for discussion, possible changes and final
approval.
As for the "speciality recognition" a strategic plan was
proposed in one of our Newsletter's. The Council had appointed Professor Koch,
Professor Martens, and myself to deal with this. The fortunate evolution was the
fact that I was appointed representative of the Education level from my country
to this EU Advisor Committee and we could follow the plan better, in association
with the other members. The unfortunate coincidence, though, (because of which
we were not able to proceed) was the decision of the authorities of Brussels to
seize for a while the action and the works of the Advisory Committee (the
rationale behind this decision was the need to reorganise and establish it on a
new basis with fewer people. more productive and less expensive).
Therefore,
until we have the new synthesis of the Advisory Committee, we should re-evaluate
and probably change the course of our actions accordingly.
Of course. this was
made possible after we managed to find the way and covering all the expenses of
our members, to organise two interim meetings. One for the Executive and one for
the Council both held in Athens during 1997. It could be a big omission if I
did not refer to the Scientific success of the Workshop on the "Fluoride
use and dosage for children" which we had in Athens, the product of which
is the document we approved and the Academy has the first Oral Health Policy to
go by. Taking advantage of this opportunity, I would like to thank Proctor &
Gamble Corporation for their generous financial contribution.
Dear friends, as an
overall estimation of the two year period, I think that thanks to the hard work
of all our dedicated members, whether they were in the different working
committees or in the Council, we managed to have a very busy and productive
period. We proceeded our Academy's business further and closer to the goals set
forth, I think very successfully.
Besides, the evaluation of the Academy's work
for these two years, allow me in my talk this afternoon to share with you some
reflections. Reflections that were created on me during these two years on the
way we are working as an Academy and on how we should try to work in the future.
Allow me here, my colleagues, to make a philosophical parenthesis by pointing
out that if we want to succeed in the goals we have set it is very critical to
realise that our personal and individual disciplines are much less important
than our common commitments and our common vision. We comprise a multinational
group with diverse personal and national ways of thinking and acting. It will
take a long time, if ever, before we find the same way of acting based on
individual disciplines.
It
is conceivable that homogeneity is impossible and unwanted. We must remember,
though, that convergence is the key to success and that this can only be
accomplished if we develop such common disciplines and orders that each one of
us will follow avoiding divergence which might lead to unwanted pathways for all
of us. We share values on which we should base our relationship for the benefit
of our Academy. The values endure and empower the membership, inspite of
changing leadership, to move forward.
Our Academy will exist and go on because of
you, the members. As members you should shape and convene our Academy's actions.
Through participation. In every level and activities of our Academy.
Through
your activity, your ideas your forge the way and influence what gets done and
what direction the Academy should go. As Executives, we ought to listen to all
of you, either as individuals or representatives of your National group to what
you have to suggest in order to better understand how we could, as an Academy,
better serve our profession and our speciality. Leadership should have a vision,
but this goes hand in hand with relationship.
As
I conclude my remarks today, I would like to thank two very special leaders who
came before me in this office. The past Presidents Professor Martin Curzon and
Professor Goran Koch. Both of you served as mentors and guides in different, but
equally important ways for me. I was taught a lot from you through observation
and modelling, and I thank you for your leadership. Becoming a President afler
you was a frightening but challenging experience about which I do not want to
remember the beginning, when a frightening feeling and a question was constantly
triggering my mind. How and what can I do more or equally to what they did. Now,
graciously I am going to recall this moment of the ending of my Presidency, that
everything is over and I have to relax. On how I did it and whether I succeeded
to fulfil the needs of our Academy and the demands of my Presidency, is
something that our members will decide evaluating my efforts and results of
these two year's work.
As an overall estimation, I think that we managed to
complete a considerable number of issues I promised at the beginning of my
Presidency, while others have come closer to completion. The close collaboration
and the hard work of the Board, the Committee members and the Councillors made
everything possible.
Taking this opportunity I would like to express my sincere
thanks to all of you and each one separately, whether you were in the Board, in
the Council or in different committees for your participation, collaboration and
support that you gave me during these two years. On behalf of the Board I also
have to thank the participants for their valuable contributions. I think that we
also have to be deeply indebted to Professor Falcolini for the good work and all
of his efforts to make a successful congress. There are always minor
shortcomings and he could not do anything with the weather!
Finally, dear
colleagues I will close by having something to say to our successors and the new
people in my own working committees by quoting something that showed me the way
these last two years. "Put your heart in your dream and no desire is too
extreme", which goes together with an old saying: "More is
accomplished by the person with desire". I am sure that the Academy passes
into good and competent hands. I wish good luck to our new President Professor
Luc Martens and a very productive and flourishing Presidency. Thank you for your
trust in me. Thank you for your support.
Constantine
Oulis
4th
EAPD CONGRESS
2nd- 5th
May 1998
Porto
Cervo Sardinia Italy
Our
4th
Congress took place in the wonderful setting of Porto Cervo. Most of the
150 delegates arrived on Friday 1st
May and were accommodated in one of three super hotels. The Congress
venue was the Conference Centre adjacent to the Tennis Club and close by to the
Hotel Cervo. On Saturday there were two pre-Congress Courses on: 1) oral
implants in young children (sponsored by Nobel Biocare) and 2) occlusal guidance
in the mixed dentition (sponsored by Sweden & Martina). There was also a
pre-Congress Symposium on nutrition and oral health (sponsored by Ilsi and Mars
Incorporated). All of these pre-Congress events comprised of presentations from
speakers from around the world and were very well attended. Whilst most of the
delegates were attending these presentations there was a Council Meeting of the
EAPD taking place. In the evening there was a welcome cocktail in the Conference
Centre where old acquaintances were renewed and some new friendships
established.
The Congress officially opened on the Sunday and commenced with a
Symposium on the need for a Speciality in Paediatric Dentistry. This consisted
of three excellent presentations starting with the Maxine Pollard Memorial
Lecture given by Professor Curzon on "why children?". This was
followed by Professor Koch who talked about the present status of the speciality
in Europe and was followed by Professor O'Mullane on the legislation and
implementation of the speciality in Europe. The poster sessions then commenced
taking us up to lunchtime. In the afternoon there were two parallel sessions.
One on the EAPD guidelines on the use of fluoride in children and the second on
pulp therapy for permanent teeth given by Professor Fuks. The oral presentations
then commenced. 134 abstracts were submitted of which 127 were accepted and
63
were Oral and 64 were Poster presentations. The abstracts were presented by
delegates from not only within Europe but from every other continent.
On Monday
there was a second Symposium sponsored by Ivocar-Vivadent on early caries
detection and prevention given jointly by Dr Kidd, Dr Weerheijm and Dr Twetman.
Professor Makinen spoke on sugar substitutes in Session 3 (sponsored by Sophie
Int.). Two further Sessions, more oral and poster presentations and the EAPD
General Assembly saw us through the rest of the day. In the evening coaches took
us all to the Banquet Reception which was held in a traditional Sardinian
restaurant. We sampled a number of Sardinian dishes and had more than a taste of
the local wine which flowed copiously! The banquet was a great social success
with Professor Falcolini pre-empting the Eurovision Song Contest by staging the
EAPD version. Every country participated by singing a well known national song.
Some countries only had one representative which meant a solo performance (well
done Billy Fenlon from Ireland). It was clearly a stroke of inspired genius by
Professor Falcolini as this event got everyone mixing together and a good time
was had by all!
On Tuesday (the final day) the third Symposium was on blood
disorders and oral health followed by the final session on the educational
programme of the IAPD (sponsored by Colgate-Palmolive). After the closing
ceremony there was an afternoon Workshop on organising and running postgraduate
programmes.
The Congress was a great success with many interesting scientific
presentations. However, the weather (torrential rain) made it impossible for us
to appreciate the true beauty of the area and the pictures of the beautiful
beaches on the posters remained untouched by EAPD delegates. Perhaps on another
sunny occasion! Despite the bad weather the Congress was a great event and our
deepest thanks must go to Professor Giuliano Falcolini for all of the hard work
he put into the organising and running of the Congress.
Jack
Toumba
EDITOR'S
APOLOGIES
Apologies
to Professor Olafur Hoskuldsson for ommiting to give him
credit
for his article on the EAPD Constitution and Bylelaws which
appeared in Issue
Three of the Newsletter in 1997
Comments
on EAPD Constitution and Byelaws
In
1992 in The Netherlands, the General Assembly approved the first Constitution
and Byelaws of our Academy. Since then a number of changes have been proposed.
Some of them have been approved by the General Assembly, others are in the
process of approval. However, during this period some issues regarding the
Constitution and Byelaws came up. One of them is Dr Hansson's comment that our
Constitution is too long and complicated and it is probably to our advantage
to cut it down. He also points out that any amendment of a Constitution
requires a rather high ration of affirmative votes of rather a large quorum.
Having a careful look at our Constitution, one realises that it consists of
seven articles. The first three articles determine the name, the purpose and the
objectives of the Academy and give the definition of Paediatric Dentistry.
They
also determine the organisation, including the incorporation of the Academy, the
location of the offices and a general statement about membership. The fourth
article determines that the legislative body is the General Assembly, while the
administrative body is the Council. The fifth article refers to the elective
officers and the Co-President and makes a general statement concerning the
appointive officers. Finally the sixth article deals with the biennial meeting
of the members, while the last one sets up the requirements for the amendments
of the Constitution.
Following Dr Hansson's suggestion, a question that comes up is whether an
article is redundant or can complicate the function of our Academy so that an
elimination or change is advisable. To answer this question it is safe to say
that the Constitution includes general statements and basically defines the
legislative body, the administrative body, the elected officers and the
Co-president. In other words the Constitution provides the general framework and
the structure which are necessary for the Academy to become an entity. It is
neither too long or too short for this purpose. It
can also be considered simple since
no details regarding
the function of the governmental bodies and decision-making processes are
described. In addition the articles included may be the minimum requirements for
a European court to give a legal entity to our Academy. Finally it is likely
that all these articles can be found in the Constitution of other Scientific
organisations. Concerning the issue of the amendment of the
Constitution, two points need special consideration.
The first one is the
quorum, while the second is the ratio of affirmative votes. Both should include
an increased number of members. The underlying rationale is that the
Constitution gives our Academy a special prestige by determing the purpose and
the objective, the structure as well as the philosophy of the organisation.
Any
amendment of the Constitution may change these essential features giving a
different face to our Academy. In this respect therefore the amendment should
have a special prestige given by a large quorum and a high ratio of affirmative
votes. Within this framework article VII of our Constitution needs
reconsideration.
Another issue is the
incorporation of our Academy by a
European Court. This issue should be addressed as soon as possible, taking into
consideration the overall benefit to our organisation by registering the Academy
in one of the EU countries.
A final point is that our Constitution and Byelaws
need further clarification. Reading the (perpetual) draft carefully, some
contradictions can be noticed. Also it is essential that the Constitutional
Committee should not only have the duty
of the proper formulation and the wording of the proposed
amendments, but should also have the power to propose changes as well.
Apostole
Vanderas
Member of the Constitution Committee
Counsilor of the Greek Branch of EAPD
GOOD
NEWS (OFFICIAL)
From
1st of July the UK will be recognising the Specialty of
Paediatric Dentistry. This means that, with Sweden, we now
have the requisite two Countries necessary to push for
recognition of our Specialty within the EU.
Here's
to the Future!
The Evolution of
Children's Dentistry in Europe
Over the Last 200 Years
Marguerite Zimmer
Journal of the History of
Dentistry vol 46 No 1 March 1998
Interest
in better child oral health in Europe began during the 19th
Century with programmes of children's dental treatment mostly for the
underprivileged, school dental hygiene programmes and school dentists in several
countries such as Belgium, Switzerland, France and Germany. In 1893 organised
check-ups in schools in Denmark, Sweden and St Petersburg revealed that 8 to 99%
of primary school children had tooth decay.
Books on subjects such as tooth
cleaning techniques, the cariogenicity of sugar, tooth eruption and resorption
the development of reimplantation and transplantation of teeth appeared first at
that time. However organised children's dentistry started early in the 20th
Century in 1902, when the first European Dental Clinic for Children was opened
in Strasbourg by the Danish dentist Ernst Jessen. Several such clinics then
followed in Sweden, Bulgaria, Catalonia, Denmark, Hungary and England. In 1913,
208 German towns had their own school dental clinic and after 1929 during the
German Reich, paediatric dental treatment was made compulsory. However, German
dentists were cut off from international development. In 1929 dental treatment
was introduced to all schools in Hungary. Free dental treatment for all children
was first instituted in 1938 in Sweden and in 1956 in Finland and subsequently
in East Germany and Switzerland.
Regarding the several societies founded for
children's dentistry, the first. in 1909. was the Danish Society of Children's
Dental Hygiene, then in 1952 the Paedodontic Sociey of Great Britain, which was
followed by the British Paedodontic Society in 1962. In 1966 the Paedodontic
Socieny was founded in France and in 1969 The International Association of
Dentistry for Children.
Summary by
Dr.
K. Kavadia
A
BRIEF HISTORY OF PAEDIATRIC DENTISTRY IN GREECE
In
Greece, until 1858, Dentistry was practised by people without any dental
scientific background. That year, by Royal Decree, some prerequisites were
established for practising Dentistry while, up to 1918, dentists were graduates
from either two Greek private Dental Schools or from foreign ones.
In 1918 the
first Dental Department of the Medical School was established at the University
of Athens with a 3-year undergraduate studies program. At that time Private
Higher Education stopped by law being recognised in Greece and dental education
became a state responsibility.
In
1921, the Dental School of the University of
Athens became autonomous with its own professors: however; the Director of
the School had still to be a professor of the Medical School. At the same time
the duration of the undergraduate studies was increased to 4 years until, in
1953, this duration was determined to be 5 years.
In
1959 a second Dental School
was established at the University of Tlaessaloniki (Salonica).
Finally, in 1970.
the Dental School of the University of Athens was made fully independent from
the corresponding Medical School. The development of paediatric dentistry in
Greece follows the same pattern as in other western Countries. Organised dental
treatment for children was first offered in needy school children in public
clinics financed by various philanthropic societies and by some private
practitioners without any speciality qualification.
The first Greek dental book
which makes some reference to children's teeth is one by D. Karakatsanis, the man
who had established the first Private Dental School in Athens. In his book,
published in 1984, devotes a separate chapter on the «Oral hygiene» and
another on «Advice to the mothers for their children's primary and permanent
teeth».
Also some other important pioneers of Dentistry in Greece had indicated
the need for special attention to the normal development of both dentitions and
to the special needs of children concerning their oral health.
Since 1925
several publications and presentations at National Meetings were devoted to the
need of instituting the position of the School Dentist but, unfortunately, this
idea has not been adopted by the Public Health System up to now. The first
organised dental clinic for school children was established in 1915 in the
"Polyclinic" founded by Em. Lampadarius and the "Patriotic League
of Greek Women". The "Patriotic Foundation for the Welfare of
Children" establishes, in 1937, its "Stomatologic Clinics for
Children". In these Clinics school children were examined and given
preventive information. The treatment for poor children was free of charge.
In
1953 existed 12 paediatric dentistry centres in Greece, 10 of which were
in Athens, and 4 mobile dental clinics that were donated to Greece by the
Canadian Government. The age of the children treated in the centres was from 2
to 18 years and the sequence of visit twice a year. Since 1953 the preventive
program included topical fluoride application in accordance with the method
described by Knutson in 1951. Paediatric Dentistry was first introduced to the
Dental School of Athens University in 1956 by J. Elianos, Professor of Operative
Dentistry. In his book on Operative Dentistry, Elianos had devoted 14 pages on
the importance and special needs of the primary teeth and the principles of
restorative care for children. He also made obligatory for undergraduate students
the restoration of 5 primary teeth.
In 1979, the successor of Elianos, Professor
Z. Mantzavnos widened the scope and curriculum of paedodontics encouraging
faculty members with formal training in Paediatric Dentistry in western
countries, to teach basic seminars in this subject and to other clinical
teaching, covering the whole spectrum of the speciality, in a 4-chair clinic
specially designed for children.
In 1982, by the Law 1268/82 on Higher Education
in Greece, Paediatric Dentistry became an independent Department within the
Section of Community Dentistry that also includes the Departments of Preventive
and Community Dentistry and Orthodontics.
The undergraduate program of the
Department extents over the last 4 semesters of undergraduate studies in
Dentistry and contains 38 hours of lectures, 13 hours of seminars. 26 hours of
laboratory work and, approximately, 150 hours of clinical work per student.
The
Department's clinic has recently been renovated and contains 11 fully equipped
chairs of the latest technology.
In 1991 the Department started a 3 year
speciality program designed in accordance with E.A.P D. curriculum guidelines in
Paediatric Dentistry and combined with a postgraduate Diploma in Oral
Biology.
The Department has 5 full-time and 15 part-time members trained in
Paediatric Dentistry specialty programs in the USA, Canada and the UK .
The
National Health System established by law in 1982, provides, through health
centres, dental preventive and restorative care to children up to 18 years of
age free of charge. In the last decade the Social Insurance Foundation
(I.K.A.)
has developed paediatric dental clinics, where prevention and treatment is
provided and other special clinics which provide only preventive care. In the 3
Children's Hospitals in Athens there are university Paediatric Dentistry
Departments and in a "General Hospital" there is a "Centre for
Care for special Patients provided under General Anaesthesia". In the
private sector there are approximately 80 paediatric dentists and a few general
practitioners limiting their practice to children and of those 58 are practising
in Athens.
When referring to the development of Paediatric Dentist in Greece one
should mention the contribution of the Hellenic Society of Dentistry for
Children founded by J. Elianos and N. Baltas in 1961. The Society is a member of
the International Association of Dentistry for Children. The major contribution
of the Society in the development of Paediatric Dentistry in Greece is through
its Annual National Meetings and its quarterly journal «Paedodontia». In 1991
two more societies were established. The Greek Association for the Study of
Cleft and Facial Deformities and the Hellenic Association of Dentistry for the
Handicapped the latter being a member of the International Association of
Dentistry for the Handicapped.
The future of Paediatric Dentistry in Greece is
from now on closely connected with the future development of the speciality in
the E.U. through the E.A.P.D. and the Greek participation in the Academy is
considered in this Country of primary importance. For this reason we in the
Hellenic Branch of E. A.P.D. are determined to work in unison with the other
member Countries towards the recognition of the specialty of Paediatric
Dentistry in the E.U. and the achievement of the Academy's goal for high quality
of oral health care for children in this Continent.
Prof
Liza Papagiannoulis
Head of Department of Paedriatic
Dentistry
School of Dentistry University of Athens
ADVERTISING
5th
Congress of the
GESELLSCHAFT FUR KINDERZAHNHEILKUNDE
UND PRIMARPROPHYLAXE IN DER DGZMK
Topics
1. Diagnostic Methods in Paediatric Dentistry
2. Monitoring of the Dentition
Further information
Prof. G
Hetzer
tel:
+49
351-458 2714
fax: +49
351-458 5303
internet:
www.dent.uni.erlangen.de
email: kraemer@dent.uni-erlangen.de
BRITISH
SOCIETY OF PAEDIATRIC DENTISTRY
NORTH WEST BRANCH
ANNUAL
SCIENTIFIC MEETING 1998
«
T1ME FOR TRAINING »
9th
to12th September
The
Conference Programme
- Manchester Programme
Wed
9th September
Teachers
of Paediatric Dentistry
Thurs
10th September
am (includes) BSPD Research Prize Presentations
pm (includes) Clinical case presentations by trainees
Fri
11th September
TRAUMA
Dr
Frances Andreasen (Copenhagen)
Sat 12th September
MODERN MATERIALS
Dr David Watts (Univ
Manchester)
Dr Richard Welbury (Newcastle Dent Hosp)
Dr Kathy Harley (Eastman Dental Hosp)
Contact:
Mrs Helen Draper
Oral Health and Development University Dental Hospital
Higher Cambridge Street Manchester M15 6FH ENGLAND
Tel & Fax +44 161 275 6610
E-mail: Helen.Draper@man.ac.uk