Intent: A clearly defined purpose/ mission statement that is concise and communicated to faculty, staff, students, patients and other communities of interest is helpful in clarifying the purpose of the program.
Intent: Assessment, planning, implementation and evaluation of the educational quality of a dental hygiene therapy education program that is broad-based, systematic, continuous and designed to promote achievement of program goals will maximize the academic success of the enrolled students. The Board expects each program to define its own goals and objectives for preparing individuals for the practice of dental hygiene therapy.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
program completion rates employment rates success of graduates on state licensing examinations success of graduates on national boards surveys of alumni, students, employers, and clinical sites other benchmarks or measures of learning used to demonstrate effectiveness examples of program effectiveness in meeting its goals examples of how the program has been improved as a result of assessment ongoing documentation of change implementation mission, goals and strategic plan document assessment plan and timelineIntent: The dental hygiene therapy education program should ensure collaboration, mutualrespect, cooperation, and harmonious relationships between and among administrators, faculty, students, staff, and alumni. The program should also support and cultivate the development of professionalism and ethical behavior by fostering diversity of faculty, students, and staff, open communication, leadership, and scholarship.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
established policies regarding ethical behavior by faculty, staff and students that are regularly reviewed and readily available student, faculty, and patient groups involved in promoting diversity, professionalism and/or leadership support for their activities Focus groups and/or surveys directed towards gathering information on student, faculty, patient, and alumni perceptions of the cultural environmentIntent: The program should develop strategies to address the dimensions of diversity, including structure, curriculum and institutional climate. The program should articulateits expectations regarding diversity across its academic community in the context of local and national responsibilities, and regularly assess how well such expectations are being achieved. Programs could incorporate elements of diversity in their planning that include, but are not limited to, gender, racial, ethnic, cultural and socioeconomic. Programs should establish focused, significant, and sustained programs to recruit and retain suitably diverse students, faculty, and staff.
Intent:The institution should have the financial resources required to develop and sustain the program on a continuing basis. The program should have the ability to employ an adequate number of full-time faculty; purchase and maintain equipment; and procure supplies, reference material and teaching aids as reflected in an annual operating budget. Financial resources should ensure that the program will be in a position to recruit and retain qualified faculty. Annual appropriations should provide for innovations and changes necessary to reflect current concepts of education in the discipline. The Board will assess the adequacy of financial support on the basis of current appropriations and the stability of sources of funding for the program.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
program's mission, goals, objectives and strategic plan institutional strategic plan revenue and expense statements for the program for the past three years revenue and expense projections for the program for the next three yearsIntent:The position of the program in the institution's administrative structure should permit direct communication between the program administrator and institutional administrators who are responsible for decisions that directly affect the program. The administration of the program should include formal provisions for program planning, staffing, management, coordination and evaluation.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
institutional organizational flow chart short and long-range strategic planning documents examples of program and institution interaction to meet program goals dental hygiene therapy representation on key college or university committees*Agencies whose mission includes the accreditation of institutions offering allied health education programs.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
affiliation agreement(s)Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
written agreement(s) contracts between the institution/ program and sponsor(s) (For example: contract(s)/agreement(s) related to facilities, funding, faculty allocations, etc.)Intent:The purpose of an active liaison mechanism is to provide a mutual exchange of information for improving the program, recruiting qualified students and meeting employment needs of the community. The responsibilities of the advisory body should be defined in writing and the program director, faculty, and appropriate institution personnel should participate in the meetings as non-voting members to receive advice and assistance.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
policies and procedures regarding the liaison mechanism outlining responsibilities, appointments, terms and meetings membership list with equitable representation if the group represents more than one discipline criteria for the selection of advisory committee members an ongoing record of committee or group minutes, deliberations and activitiesIntent:The scope and depth of the curriculum should reflect the objectives and philosophy of higher education. The time necessary for psychomotor skill development and the number of required content areas require three academic years of study, which is considered the minimum preparation for a dental hygiene therapist.This could include documentation of advanced standing. However, the curriculum may be structured to provide opportunity for students who require more time to extend the length of their instructional program.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
copies of articulation agreements curriculum documents course evaluation forms and summaries records of competency examinations college catalog outlining course titles and descriptions documentation of advanced standing requirementsIntent:Assessment of student performance should measure not only retention of factualknowledge, but also the development of skills, behaviors, and attitudes needed forsubsequent education and practice. The evaluation of competence is an ongoing processthat requires a variety of assessments that can measure not only the acquisition of knowledge and skills but also assess the process and procedures which will be necessary for entry level practice.
Intent:The program should identify the dental therapy fundamental knowledge and competencies that will be included in the curriculum based on the program goals, resources, current dental hygiene therapy practice responsibilities and other influencing factors. Individual course documentation needs to be periodically reviewed and revised to accurately reflect instruction being provided as well as new concepts and techniquestaught in the program.
Intent:If a student does not meet evaluation criteria, provision should be made forremediation or dismissal. On the basis of designated criteria, both students and facultycan periodically assess progress in relation to the stated goals and objectives of the program.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
written remediation policy and procedures records of attrition/retention rates related to academic performance institutional due process policies and proceduresIntent:Educational program should prepare students to assume responsibility for their own learning. The education program should teach students how to learn and apply evolving and new knowledge over a complete career as a health care professional. Lifelong learning skills include student assessment of learning needs.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
students routinely assess their own progress toward overall competency and individual competencies as they progress through the curriculum students identify learning needs and create personal learning plans students participate in the education of others, including fellow students, patients, and other health care professionals, that involves critique and feedbackIntent:Throughout the curriculum, the educational program should use teaching and learning methods that support the development of critical thinking and problem solving skills.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
explicit discussion of the meaning, importance, and application of critical thinking use of questions by instructors that require students to analyze problem etiology, compare and evaluate alternative approaches, provide rationale for plans of action, and predict outcomes prospective simulations in which students perform decision-making retrospective critiques of cases in which decisions are reviewed to identify errors, reasons for errors, and exemplary performance writing assignments that require students to analyze problems and discuss alternative theories about etiology and solutions, as well as to defend decisions made asking students to analyze and discuss work products to compare how outcomes correspond to best evidence or other professional standardsIntent:Foundational knowledge should be established early in the dental hygiene therapyprogram and be of appropriate scope and depth to prepare the student to achieve competence in defined components of dental hygiene therapy practice. Content identified in each subject may not necessarily constitute a separate course, but the subject areas are included within the curriculum.
Curriculum content and learning experiences should provide the foundation forcontinued formal education and professional growth with a minimal loss of time and duplication of learning experiences. General education, social science, and biomedical science courses included in the curriculum should be taught at the postsecondary level.
Programs and their sponsoring institutions are encouraged to provide for educational mobility of students through articulation arrangements and career laddering (e.g.between dental hygiene therapy education programs and dental hygiene education programs) that results in advanced standing permitted for dental hygienists.
Intent:These subjects provide prerequisite background for components of thecurriculum, which prepare the students to communicate effectively, assume responsibilityfor individual oral health counseling, and participate in community health programs.
Intent:These subjects provide background for both didactic and clinical dental sciences.The subjects are to be of the scope and depth comparable to college transferable liberal arts course work. The program should ensure that biomedical science instruction serves as a foundation for student analysis and synthesis of the interrelationships of the body systems when making decisions regarding oral health services within the context of total body health. The biomedical knowledge base emphasizes the orofacial complex as an important anatomical area existing in a complex biological interrelationship with the entire body.
Dental hygiene therapists need to recognize abnormal conditions to understand the parameters of dental hygiene therapy care.The program should ensure that graduates have the level of understanding that assures that the health status of the patient will not be compromised by the dental hygiene therapy interventions.
Intent:These subjects provide the student with knowledge of oral health and disease as a basis for assuming responsibility for implementing preventive and therapeutic services. Teaching methodologies should be utilized to assure that the student can assume responsibility for the assimilation of knowledge requiring judgment, decision making skills and critical analysis.
Intent:Students should learn about factors and practices associated with disparities in health status among subpopulations, including but not limited to, racial, ethnic, geographic, or socioeconomic groups. In this manner, students will be best prepared for dental hygiene therapy practice in a diverse society when they learn in an environment characterized by, and supportive of, diversity and inclusion. Such an environment should facilitate dental hygiene therapy education in:
basic principles of culturally competent health care; recognition of health care disparities and the development of solutions; the importance of meeting the health care needs of dentally underserved populations, and; the development of core professional attributes, such as altruism, empathy, and social accountability, needed to provide effective care in a multi-dimensionally diverse society.Dental hygiene therapists should be able to effectively communicate with individuals, groups and other health care providers. The ability to communicate verbally and in written form is basic to the safe and effective provision of oral health services for diverse populations.Dental hygiene therapists should recognize the cultural influences impacting the delivery of health services to individuals and communities (i.e. health status, health services and health beliefs).
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
student projects demonstrating the ability to communicate effectively with a variety of individuals and groups. examples of individual and community-based oral health projects implemented by students during the previous academic year evaluation mechanisms designed to monitor knowledge and performanceIntent:Students should understand the roles of members of the health care team, including supervising responsibilities of dental auxiliaries, and have educational experiences, particularly clinical experiences, that involve working with other health care professional students and practitioners. Students should have educational experiences in which they participate in the coordination of patient care within the health care system relevant to dentistry.
Intent:Graduates should know how to draw on a range of resources, among which are professional codes, regulatory law, and ethical theories. These resources should pertainto the academic environment, patient care, practice management and research. They should guide judgment and action for issues that are complex, novel, ethically arguable, divisive, or of public concern.
Intent: Dental hygiene therapists should understand the laws which govern the practice of the dental profession. Graduates should know how to access licensure requirements, rules and regulations, and state practice acts for guidance in judgment and action.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
evaluation mechanisms designed to monitor knowledge and performance concerning legal and regulatory concepts outcomes assessment mechanismsIntent:The education program should introduce students to the basic principles of research and its application for patients.
Intent:Sufficient practice time and learning experiences should be provided during preclinical and clinical courses to ensure that students attain clinical competence.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
program clinical experiences patient tracking data for enrolled and past students policies regarding selection of patients and assignment of procedures monitoring or tracking system protocols clinical evaluation system policy and procedures demonstrating student competencies clinic schedules for each termThe dental hygiene therapist provides care with supervision at a level specified by the state dental practice act. The curriculum for dental hygiene therapy programs will support the competencies listed in subsection B(22) within the scope of dental hygiene therapy practice.
The educational program must include a course of study of at least 40 hours of instruction in a formal program in administration of local anesthesia sponsored by an institutional program accredited by the Commission on Dental Accreditation of the American Dental Association. The course must include didactic studies and clinical experience in the administration of block and infiltration anesthesia. A minimum of 30 satisfactorily performed injections is required.
The curriculum for required study must include but is not necessarily limited to:
Medical history evaluation procedures;
The educational program must include a course of study in the administration of nitrous oxide that is a part of a CODA approved dental hygiene therapy or dental hygiene program or other Board approved course. The nitrous oxide course must be at least 8 hours in length and include didactic and clinical components and an exit examination.
Intent:Graduates should be able to evaluate, assess, and apply current and emerging science and technology. Graduates should possess the basic knowledge, skills, and values to practice dental hygiene therapy at the time of graduation. The school identifies the competencies that will be included in the curriculum based on the school's goals, resources, accepted dental hygiene therapy responsibilities and other influencing factors. Recognizing that there is a single standard of dental care, the care experiences provided for patients by students should be adequate to ensure competency in all components of dental hygiene therapy. Programs should assess overall competency, not simply individual competencies in order to measure the graduate's readiness to enter the practice of dental hygiene therapy.
Intent:Service learning experiences and/or community-based learning experiences are essential to the development of a culturally competent oral health care workforce. The interaction and treatment of diverse populations in a community-based clinical environment adds a special dimension to clinical learning experience and engenders a life-long appreciation for the value of community service.
Intent: To allow sufficient time to fulfill administrative responsibilities, teaching contact hours should be limited for the program director and should not take precedent over administrative responsibilities.
Intent: The program director's background, and if applicable the dental director's background, should include administrative experience, instructional experience, and professional experience in general dentistry. The term of interim/acting program director should not exceed a two year period.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
bio sketch of program director curriculum vitaeExamples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
program director position description program dental director position description, if applicableIntent:The adequacy of numbers of faculty should be determined by faculty to studentratios during laboratory, radiography and clinical practice sessions rather than by the number of full-time equivalent positions for the program. The faculty to student ratios inclinical and radiographic practice should allow for individualized instruction and evaluation of the process as well as the end results. Faculty are responsible for both ensuring that the clinical and radiographic services delivered by students meet current standards for dental care and for the instruction and evaluation of students during their performance of those services.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
faculty teaching commitments class schedules listing of ratios for clinical, radiographic and laboratory coursesIntent: The adequacy of numbers of faculty should be determined by faculty to student ratios during laboratory, radiography and supervised patient care clinics rather than by the total number of full-time equivalent positions for the program. The faculty to student ratios in clinical and radiographic practice should allow for individualized instruction and assessment of students' progression toward competency. Faculty are alsoresponsible for ensuring that the patient care services delivered by students meet the program's standard of care.
Intent:Faculty should have current background in education theory and practice, concepts relative to the specific subjects they are teaching, clinical practice experience and, if applicable, distance education techniques and delivery. Dentists, dentalhygiene therapists and dental hygienists who supervise students' clinical procedures should have qualifications which comply with the state dental practice act. Individuals who teach and supervise students in clinical experiences should have qualifications comparable to faculty who teach in the main program clinic and are familiar with the program'sobjectives, content, instructional methods and evaluation procedures.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
faculty curriculum vitaeIntent:Ongoing faculty development is a requirement to improve teaching and learning, to foster curricular change, to enhance retention and job satisfaction of faculty, and to maintain the vitality of academic dentistry as the wellspring of a learned profession. Effective teaching requires not only content knowledge, but also an understanding of pedagogy, including knowledge of curriculum design and development, curriculum evaluation, and teaching methodologies.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
evidence of participation in workshops, in-service training, self-study courses, on-line and credited courses attendance at regional and national meetings that address education mentored experiences for new faculty scholarly productivity maintenance of existing and development of new and/or emerging clinical skillsIntent: An objective evaluation system including student, administration and peerevaluation can identify strengths and weaknesses for each faculty member (to includethose at distance sites) including the program administrator. The results of evaluations should be communicated to faculty members on a regular basis to ensure continuedimprovement.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
sample evaluation mechanisms addressing teaching, patient care, research, scholarship and service faculty evaluation policy, procedures and mechanismsExamples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
institution's promotion/tenure policy faculty senate handbook institutional policies and procedures governing facultyIntent:Maintenance and custodial staff should be sufficient to meet the unique needs of the academic and clinical program facilities. Faculty should have access to instructional specialists, such as those in the areas of curriculum, testing, counseling, computer usage, instructional resources and educational psychology. Secretarial and clerical staff should be assigned to assist the administrator and faculty in preparing course materials, correspondence, maintaining student records, and providing supportive services for student recruitment and admissions activities. Support staff should be assigned to assistwith the operation of the clinic facility including the management of appointments, records, billing, insurance, inventory, hazardous waste, and infection control.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
description of current program support/personnel staffing program staffing schedules staff job descriptions examples of how support staff are used to support studentsIntent:The dental hygiene therapy education curriculum is a postsecondary scientifically-oriented program which is rigorous and intensive. Previous academic performanceand/or performance on standardized national tests of scholastic aptitude or otherpredictors of scholastic aptitude and ability should be utilized as criteria in selecting students who have the potential for successfully completing the program. Applicants should be informed of the criteria and procedures for selection, goals of the program, curricular content, course transferability and the scope of practice of and employment opportunities for dental hygiene therapists.
Because enrollment is limited by facility capacity, special program admissions criteria and procedures are necessary to ensure that students are selected who have the potential for successfully completing the program. The program administrator and faculty, incooperation with appropriate institutional personnel, should establish admissions procedures which are non-discriminatory and ensure the quality of the program.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
admissions management policies and procedures copies of catalogs, program brochures or other written materials established ranking procedures or criteria for selection minutes from admissions committee periodic analysis supporting the validity of established admission criteria and procedures results from institutional research used in interpreting admissions data and criteria and/or correlating data with student performance advanced standing policies and procedures, if appropriateIntent:Admissions criteria and procedures should ensure the selection of a diverse student body with the potential for successfully completing the program. The administration and faculty, in cooperation with appropriate institutional personnel, should establish admissions procedures that are non-discriminatory and ensure the quality of the program.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
Policies and procedures on advanced standing Results of appropriate qualifying examinations Course equivalency or other measures to demonstrate equal scope and level of knowledgeIntent:In determining the number of dental hygiene therapy students enrolled in a program(inclusive of distance sites), careful consideration should be given to ensure that the number of students does not exceed the program's resources, including patient supply, financial support, scheduling options, facilities, equipment, technology and faculty.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
sufficient number of clinical and laboratory stations based on enrollment clinical schedules demonstrating equitable and sufficient clinical unit assignments clinical schedules demonstrating equitable and sufficient radiology unit assignments faculty full-time equivalent (FTE) positions relative to enrollment budget resources and strategic plan equipment maintenance and replacement plan patient pool availability analysis course schedules for all termsIntent:The classroom facilities should include an appropriate number of student stations with equipment and space for individual student performance in a safe environment.
Intent:The facilities should permit the attainment of program goals and objectives. Toensure health and safety for patients, students, faculty and staff, the physical facilities and equipment should effectively accommodate the clinic and/or laboratory schedule. This Standard applies to all sites where students receive clinical instruction.
Intent:The radiography facilities should allow the attainment of program goals and objectives. Radiography facilities and equipment should effectively accommodate the clinic and/or laboratory schedules, the number of students, faculty and staff, and comply with applicable regulations to ensure effective instruction in a safe environment. This Standard applies to all sites where students receive clinical instruction.
Intent: The laboratory facilities should include student stations with equipment and space for individual student performance of laboratory procedures with instructor supervision. This Standard applies to all sites where students receive clinical instruction.
Intent: Office space for full- and part-time faculty should be allocated to allow for classpreparation, student counseling and supportive academic activities. Student and programrecords should be stored to ensure confidentiality and safety.
Intent:The acquisition of knowledge, skill and values for students requires the use of current instructional methods and materials to support learning needs and development. All students, including those receiving education at distance sites, should be assuredaccess to learning resources. Institutional library holdings should include or provideaccess to a diversified collection of current dental and medical literature and referencesnecessary to support teaching, student learning needs, service, research and development. There should be a mechanism for program faculty to periodically review, acquire and select current titles and instructional aids.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
a list of references on education, medicine, dentistry, dental hygiene therapy, dental hygiene and the biomedical sciences policies and procedures related to learning resource access timely electronic access to a wide variety of professional scientific literature skeletal and anatomic models and replicas, sequential samples of laboratory procedures, slides, films, video, and other media which depict current techniques a wide range of printed materials and instructional aids and equipment available for utilization by students and faculty current and back issues of major scientific and professional journals related to medicine, dentistry, dental hygiene therapy, dental hygiene and the biomedical sciencesIntent:All policies and procedures should protect the students and provide avenues for appeal and due process. Policies should ensure that student records accurately reflect the work accomplished and are maintained in a secure manner. Students should have available the necessary support to provide career information and guidance as to practice, post-graduate and research opportunities.
Intent:All individuals who provide patient care or have contact with patients shouldfollow all standards of risk management thus ensuring a safe and healthy environment.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
policies and procedures regarding infectious disease immunizations immunization compliance records declinations formsIntent:All radiographic exposure should be integrated with clinical patient careprocedures.
Intent:Policies and procedures should be in place to provide for a safe environment forstudents, patients, faculty and staff.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
accessible and functional emergency equipment, including oxygen instructional materials written protocol and procedures emergency kit(s) installed and functional safety devices and equipment first aid kit accessible for use in managing clinic and/or laboratory accidentsIntent: Programs should create and maintain databases for monitoring and improvingpatient care and serving as a resource for research and evidence-based practice.
Intent:All patients should receive appropriate care that assures their right as a patientis protected.Patients should be advised of their treatment needs and the scope of careavailable at the training facility and appropriately referred for procedures that cannot beprovided by the program. This Standard applies to all program sites where clinicaleducation is provided.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
documentation of an ongoing review of a representative sample of patients and patient records to assess the appropriateness, necessity and quality of care provided quality assurance policy and procedures patient bill of rightsIntent:The primacy of care for the patient should be well established in the management of the program and clinical facility assuring that the rights of the patientare protected. A written statement of patient rights should include:
Intent:The need for students to satisfactorily complete specific clinical requirementsprior to advancement and graduation should not adversely affect the health and care of patients.
Examples of evidence to demonstrate compliance may include:
patient bill of rights documentation that patients are informed of their rights continuing care (recall) referral policies and proceduresIntent: The program should use evidence to evaluate new technology and products and to guide treatment decisions.
02-313 C.M.R. ch. 17, § III