Taking advantage of every opportunity for five decades
Transcription
Taking advantage of every opportunity for five decades
PART 1 – ANNE BOSY Taking advantage of every opportunity for five decades For clarification on this article, we reached Anne Bosy in Las Vegas where she was attending the esteemed Crown Council meetings. She was dealing with e-mails prior to her 7 a.m. breakfast – a day that would end at 10 p.m. This might not be a typical day for Anne, but 10-hour days are fairly common as co-founder and chief scientist of Oravital Inc. in Toronto. This is the first in a two-part series on the life and work of Anne Bosy, whose career spans five decades as a practising dental hygienist, lecturer, educator, researcher and innovator. The next issue will focus on what dental hygienists can learn from her research. T alk to Anne Bosy, and you’d think she just graduated from dental hygiene school. Her infectious enthusiasm and passion for the profession belies the 50-plus year career that has earned her the distinction of being the longest continuously registered dental hygienist in Ontario. But this is far from being her only claim to fame. The farm girl from northern Saskat chewan migrated to Toronto at the tender age of 17 to study dental hygiene at the University of Toronto because “it sounded different and there were few career options for women at the time.” Since then she has carved out a reputation as a leading researcher and innovator in the global fight against bad breath and periodontal disease. Her resume reads like a cross between a university professor’s CV and a corporate CEO’s bio – with a bit of James Bondlike espionage thrown in. • Three degrees – Bachelor of Science, Master of Science and Master of Education • 12-plus years as a full-time dental hygienist • A two-year stint with Canadian University Services Overseas (CUSO), in which she worked undercover for the Government of Barbados to flush out bogus dental clinics and revamp the country’s dental health program • Three years as a public health dental hygienist for the Region of Peel • 25 years teaching and developing courses in the Allied Health Department (now the Centre for Health Sciences) at George Brown College, where she designed the first modular computer-assisted teaching system (her Master of Education was in computer applications) • Instructor in microbiology and immunology at Regency Dental Hygiene Academy 6 Focus • April 2015 • Accreditor for the Canadian Dental Association • Co-founder of the Fresh Breath Clinic, Toronto, specializing in the assessment and treatment of halitosis • Originator of the Oravital System, a scientific approach to diagnosing and treating oral infections • Co-founder and chief scientist of Oravital Inc., which coaches dental clinics in the Oravital System and develops antimicrobial rinses • Respected researcher and lecturer in microbiology and the causes and treatment of halitosis and periodontal disease It’s an illustrious list of achievements rare among dental hygienists, in a career, she admits, that’s been fashioned from one serendipitous event after another. “Whenever I was asked to try something different, my response was ‘You want me to do what?’, but I never said ‘I am not going to do this.’ I took advantage of every opportunity that came my way,” says Anne. By 1991, armed with B.Sc. and M.Ed. degrees earned part-time while raising three children, Anne got an offer that launched her research career. She was asked to assist with a U of T summer research project examining the effectiveness of sulphide monitoring to measure halitosis. “I measured each patient’s breath. When the summer was over, U of T offered me a substantial grant to continue the research.” She enrolled full-time in the university’s Master of Science program and turned the project into her thesis. What she learned led her to co-found the Fresh Breath Clinic, a Saturday morning experiment that quickly grew – when U of T shut down its halitosis clinic, many of the Anne Bosy patients were referred to Anne. Over the next 13 years, she established herself as a leading researcher in breath odour and laid the groundwork for what would later become the Oravital System. Her scientific approach – she was among the first to use microbiology sampling to diagnose halitosis and periodontal disease – was revolutionary at the time. Today, partly through her efforts, we now know that dental plaque is a colourless biofilm that can’t be detected in routine dental visits, that periodontitis is a disease resulting from that biofilm, and that oral microbiology assessment can serve as a rapid diagnostic tool for detecting the disease at its earliest stages. But this septuagenarian scientist-cumentrepreneur shows no signs of slowing down. She continues to conduct and communicate her research, manage a grueling schedule of lectures and presentations, and promote and expand her business – close to 100 clinics in Canada and the U.S. now use the Oravital System. Her goal is to convince dental hygienists everywhere to treat any bleeding in the mouth seriously. Says Anne: “What if you went to your physician with a wound, and he said, ‘It’s only a little bleeding. I’m just going to run this steel wool over it. Come back in three months and we’ll do it again.’ We need to say, ‘You’re bleeding. Let’s find out why.” • www.odha.on.ca