Beyond the Drill: Can Digital Gadgets Redefine the Future of Dental Education?

  • Szabolcs Felszeghy
  • , Adam Kada
  • , Amanda Jackson
  • , Andreea Didilescu
  • , Barry Quinn
  • , Dalia Meisha
  • , Damiano Pasqualini
  • , Daniela Alejandra Pino Valenzuela
  • , Nejdet Adanir
  • , Esther Carramolino Cuellar
  • , Gianrico Spagnuolo
  • , Gitana Rederiene
  • , Gulsun Gul
  • , Hal Duncan
  • , Hany Mohamed Aly Ahmed
  • , Jorge Alberto Tricio Pesce
  • , Khaled Ahmed
  • , Laura Andriukaitiene
  • , Łukasz Zadrozny
  • , Małgorzata Ponto-Wolska
  • Margaret J. Cox, Maria Florencia Sittoni Pino, María Paz Rodríguez Hopp, Masako Nagasawa, Mengwei Pang, Mikko Liukkonen, Murat Mutluay, Neshka Manchorova, Nicla Flacco, Nisrine El Arrouf, Noha Waleed Barakat, Outi Huhtela, Peter Lingström, Samantha Byrne, Sobia Zafar, Sompop Bencharit, Suzie Bergman, Ulf Örtengren, Reinhard Chun Wang Chau*
*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalEditorial

Abstract

Background: The integration of artificial intelligence (AI), virtual reality (VR) and haptic technologies is revolutionising dental education, offering transformative opportunities to enhance skill acquisition, ergonomic awareness and student well-being. These tools offer immersive, repeatable and personalised learning experiences, addressing challenges such as underdeveloped manual dexterity in digitally literate students and post-COVID disruptions in hands-on training. Aim: This letter aims to highlight the transformative potential of AI-driven adaptive feedback paired with VR and haptic simulators in creating risk-free environments for mastering complex procedures, while advocating for strategies to reduce clinical errors and promote sustainability by minimising reliance on physical resources. Discussion: Despite their potential, barriers such as high costs, resistance to change, logistical complexities and insufficient longitudinal evidence hinder widespread adoption. These challenges perpetuate educational disparities, particularly in low-resource regions, and necessitate targeted strategies such as cost-effective models, faculty retraining and international collaboration. The rise of digitally native educators and global initiatives, such as the Digital, VR-Haptic Thinkers network, signals a shift toward future-ready curricula that prioritise equity, sustainability and innovation. As mandated by the EU's 2024 directive, digital dentistry knowledge is now a fundamental component of basic dental training. Conclusion: To fully harness these technologies, stakeholders must address evidence gaps, validate cognitive benefits and align curricula with modern learner expectations. This letter calls for urgent collaboration among educators, institutions and industry to overcome barriers, ensuring dental education evolves to meet 21st-century demands for equitable, high-quality oral healthcare delivery.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Journal of Dental Education
DOIs
StateAccepted/In press - 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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