International College of Dentists

The International College of Dentists was conceived in 1920 at a farewell party in Tokyo for Dr. Louis Ottofy when he was returning home to the United States after practicing dentistry in the Philippines and Japan for 23 years. A colleague, Dr. Tsurukichi Okumura, a Japanese dentist, also urged Dr. Ottofy to form an international organization.

International College of Dentists
Formation1920
TypeProfessional association
HeadquartersFlint, Michigan, USA
Location
  • International
Membership
12,000 (2012)
Official language
Multi-Lingual, but English is the official language
President
Dr. Bettie McKaig, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA
Key people
Dr. Tsurukich Okumura,
Dr. Louis Ottofy
(Co-Founders)

Six years later, at the Seventh International Dental Congress in Philadelphia, U.S.. the group of dentists met again to finalize the concept of the ICD then on New Year's Eve of 1927 the College was announced with Drs. Ottofy and Okumura as the Co-Founders. The first President of the College was Andres O. Weber, from Havana, Cuba.

Originally, 250 dentists from 162 countries accepted the Fellowship oath. The group was selected based on an international reputation and participation in the FDI World Dental Federation. Each Fellow was given the task of nominating other dentists for membership. Dentists who are inducted into the organization place the post-nominals FICD with their name.

Growth of the Organization

In the years following the initial formation of the ICD, membership grew such that autonomous sections were required. In 1934, the first of these sections, located in the United States of America,[1] was formed. In the 1960s the Philippines Section [2] grew then the Middle East Section.[3] In the 1980s the South American Section [4] was formed. Today, the organization claims a membership of approximately 12,000 (2012) from hundreds of countries.

Cultivate humanitarian efforts

In 2008, fifteen ICD Fellows of Myanmar with eight assistants went to cyclone-affected townships in the Delta and Dadeyae areas, providing free dental care and making some donations to the people in the camps under the name of the ICD organization. Over 235 patients were treated. Similar dental missions occur throughout the year and around the world to underserviced areas under the name of the ICD. Other projects are sponsored by ICD around the world.[5] For a more detailed list of humanitarian projects see the list at Projects Map

Improve the welfare of the public internationally

In Vietnam and Cambodia training for public health dentistry has been limited because of funds and experts in the field. Through an ICD sponsored program, roughly 40% of the public health dentists were given additional training. Another 20% of them went on to receive higher education (graduate) degrees in public health dentistry. While these programs do not directly provide care to patients in either country, they develop practical skills for dentists in designing programs for their populations. The organization has collaborated to improve infection prevention and safety practices.[6]

Communications

Publications are released by each of the autonomous sections and most maintain their own web sites. The ICD Headquarters also publishes a digital journal called The Globe[7] and a quarterly newsletter called The College Today [8]

References

  1. Section I website
  2. Section IX website
  3. Section X website
  4. Section IV website
  5. "Promoting oral health care in Haiti". www.dentistry.co.uk. 19 January 2019. Retrieved 9 April 2019.
  6. OSAP
  7. "The Globe" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-01-06. Retrieved 2009-03-12.
  8. The College Today
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.