To address the 2021 theme "Inclusion" for UQ Teaching and Learning Week we highlighted some of the teachers who enhance student learning in UQ's Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences.
Professor Saso Ivanovski, Head of The University of Queensland’s School of Dentistry has been recognised as a world leader in regenerative periodontal medicine research with a prestigious international award.
Dr Pingping Han, a postdoctoral research fellow from UQ’s School of Dentistry was internationally recognised with an Osteology Advanced Researcher Grant from the Osteology Foundation in Switzerland for her work towards treating gum disease.
Professor Lo Do, from UQ's School of Dentistry was interviewed by Brisbane Times about his study on 24,664 Australian children that raised particular concerns for young Queenslanders and tooth decay.
Children with limited exposure to fluoridated water and a high sugar intake are 70 per cent more likely to develop cavities in their permanent teeth, according to University of Queensland-led research.
UQ School of Dentistry Head of School Professor Saso Ivanovski features in Bite Magazine about the new Centre for Orofacial Regeneration, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation (COR3).
3D printing technology will be used to rebuild human teeth, bones and tissues at The University of Queensland’s new Centre for Orofacial Regeneration, Reconstruction and Rehabilitation (COR3).
UQ's School of Dentistry Associate Professor Ratilal Lalloo spoke to the Brisbane Times about an intervention that reduced Indigenous kids’ tooth decay rates in remote north Queensland.
A combination of preventive treatments reduced tooth decay and improved the quality of life for more than 200 Indigenous Australian children living in remote north Queensland, a study has found.
The UQ Faculty of Health and Behavioural Sciences is proud to announce that following an international recruitment process, Professor Saso Ivanovski has been appointed as the next Head of the UQ School of Dentistry.
Baby teeth, or milk teeth, act like lighthouses to guide the adult ones to their correct destination. A baby tooth will become wobbly and fall out because the adult tooth that follows pushes through to break down the roots of the baby tooth. Dr Arosha Weerakoon writes for The Conversation.
A technological advancement that has the potential to stimulate bone formation inside the human body has been developed by University of Queensland researchers.
An 80,000 word PhD thesis would take nine hours to present, but students in the UQ Three Minute Thesis (3MT®) Competition present their thesis and its significance in dynamic and informative presentations of just three minutes in length.