"Gê-i-ha̍k" pán-pún chi-kan bô-kāng--ê tē-hng

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<ref>{{cite report |author = Neil Costley |author2 = Jo Fawcett |title = General Dental Council Patient and Public Attitudes to Standards for Dental Professionals, Ethical Guidance and Use of the Term Doctor |url = http://www.gdc-uk.org/Newsandpublications/research/Documents/GDC%20Public%20Attitudes%20to%20Standards%20for%20Dental%20Professionals.pdf |publisher = [[General Dental Council]]/George Street Research |date = November 2010 |access-date = 11 January 2017 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160304091233/https://www.gdc-uk.org/Newsandpublications/research/Documents/GDC%20Public%20Attitudes%20to%20Standards%20for%20Dental%20Professionals.pdf |archive-date = 4 March 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref group="nb">Whether Dentists are referred to as "Doctor" is subject to geographic variation. For example, they are called "Doctor" in the US. In the UK, dentists have traditionally been referred to as "Mister" as they identified themselves with [[barber surgeon]]s more than [[physician]]s (as do surgeons in the UK, see [[Surgeon#Titles]]). However more UK dentists now refer to themselves as "Doctor", although this was considered to be potentially misleading by the British public in a single report (see Costley and Fawcett 2010).</ref>}}
| type = [[Profession]]
| activity_sector = [[Health care]], [[Kái-phò-ha̍k]], [[Physiology]], [[Pathology]], [[Medicine]], [[Pharmacology]], [[Cosmesis]], [[SurgeryGoā-kho-ha̍k]]
| competencies = {{flatlist|
* Sub-Millimeter Surgical Dexterity