Should 'dental therapists' be allowed to drill and extract?
>> Thursday, March 12, 2009
Dentists are concerned about a bill -- cleared a Minnesota Senate committee -- that gives clinicians more responsibility.
Minnesota is poised to become only the second state in the country to allow someone other than a dentist to fill cavities and pull teeth.
The proposal, which cleared a state Senate committee on Wednesday, would create the dental equivalent of nurse practitioners to provide care in parts of the state where dentists are in short supply.
But one big question has yet to be settled: Just how independent should they be?
The Minnesota Dental Association insists that dentists must be on the premises to supervise the new clinicians, known as "oral health practitioners" or dental therapists. But a group called the Minnesota Safety Net Coalition says the new clinicians should be free to work in other settings in order to reach thousands of low-income children and adults who now get no dental care at all.
Last year, the Legislature gave its initial blessing to the idea of a new type of dental practitioner, and asked members of both sides to join in a "work group" to hammer out their differences. But on Wednesday, there was little sign that the debate has eased.
Dr. Scott Lingle, past president of the Dental Association, warned that even a simple tooth extraction can lead to serious complications, and that dental therapists won't be able to handle them without a dentist present. "Essentially, you're playing doctor without going to doctor school," he said.
Another dentist, Dr. Chris Carroll, said in written testimony that the idea "resembles, too much, what is now being done in the lesser developed parts of the world," adding that "it would be reproducing a level of patient care that America evolved away from years ago."
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