A successful career in dental hygiene requires a variety of skills to ensure excellent patient care and safety.
These technical standards are required abilities for effective performance in Normandale's dental hygiene program. The standards are compatible with the scope of practice as defined by the Minnesota State Board of Dentistry.
The following are examples to show how a standard may be applied in entry-level dental hygiene education programs. These examples are for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to be a complete list of all tasks in an entry-level dental hygiene program.
Please contact our Office for Students with Disabilities if you need accommodations.
The ability to:
Examples
Careful thought, reasoned judgment. Differentiated from opinion and superficial memorization of facts by the ability to obtain and use a proper quantity and quality of data for a given situation.
Critical thinkers question assumptions, routines and rituals, reconsider "known facts" when added information becomes available and develop new "rules" when old ones fail or become unavailable.
Ability to learn and reason: to integrate, analyze and synthesize data concurrently.
Solve problems rapidly, consider alternatives and decide on managing or intervening in the care of a patient.
Examples
Possess the physical strength and dexterity necessary to provide safe patient care.
Examples
Ability to plan routines, to think clearly and rationally, and to function appropriately in routine.
Able to manage time within a given timeframe.
Examples
Ability to tolerate lengthy periods of physical activity.
Able to tolerate repetitious and strenuous work.
Examples
Move quickly and/or continuously.
Tolerate extended periods of sitting.
Communicate effectively in English with others in oral and written form.
Able to communicate with patients and members of the healthcare team to plan and deliver safe care.
Examples
Interact with clients, families, staff, peers, instructors, and small groups from a variety of social, emotional, cultural, and intellectual backgrounds.
Examples
Auditory ability sufficient to hear normal conversation and/or assess health needs.
Examples
Ability to monitor alarms, emergency signals, auscultatory sounds (e.g., B/P, cries for help, telephone interactions, dictation).
Communicates with patients, families, and colleagues.
Visual ability sufficient for observation, assessment and performance of safe dental care.
Examples
Tactile ability sufficient for physical assessment, inclusive of size, shape, temperature, and texture.
Examples
Performs palpation (e.g., taking patient’s pulse)
Performs functions of intra and extra-oral exams, dental and periodontal examinations and/or those related to preventative and therapeutic interventions (e.g., exploring, instrumentation).
Possess the emotional health needed for full use of intellectual abilities, the exercise of good judgment, and the prompt and safe completion of all responsibilities.
Examples
Ability to tolerate environmental stressors.
Examples
A-2507