Can mid-level dentist practitioners give the same quality of dental care as a dentist?
This question is being raised in the Northwest where a Washington state dental practitioner bill passed through the Senate Health Committee. The Senate version of this legislation moves out of committee and can potentially be considered by the full Senate.
If this bill passes in the Senate, Washington will be the next U.S. state to adopt a mid-level dental provider model to create both dental hygiene practitioners and dental practitioners, who will be supervised (offsite) by a dentist.
These practitioners will be allowed to provide various levels of dental care “pursuant to a written practice plan with a dentist.”
Dental hygiene practitioners would expand the scope of practice of the state’s hygienists, who can now place fillings after a dentist has done the prep work. They would receive specialized training to do extractions, handle medical emergencies, and administer some drugs.
Dental practitioners would be permitted to do everything that hygienists can do except scaling and cleanings. They could also do restorations, administer anesthesia, and extract primary teeth as well as loose permanent teeth (+3 to +4 mobility).
Both types of practitioners could work with offsite supervision if approved by their supervising dentist, but neither could do dental crowns, bridges, or complicated procedures. (Dr Bicuspid)
The Washington Academy of General Dentistry and the Washington State Dental Association oppose this bill siting, “insufficient training for diagnosis and a lack of direct supervision.”
What are your thoughts on mid-level dentist practitioners? Are they bad for dentistry?