Please note that this post contains affiliate links and any sales made through such links will reward MageeNews.com a small commission – at no extra cost to you.
By: Catherine Dunn, MDA, RDH, President, Mississippi Dental Hygienists’
Based on analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation, as of Sept 30, 2019, Mississippi has 145 Dental Care Health Professional Shortage Areas with a population of 1.8 million individuals. It is estimated that only 45% of the need is met and 248 practitioners are needed to remove the HPSA designations.
Mississippi currently has the most restrictive policies in the nation for dentists and dental hygienists’ operating agreements. At this time, dental hygienists are only allowed to perform work on patients under the direct supervision of a dentist. This means that if a dentist is caught in traffic or takes a long lunch break, the hygienist cannot even sit the patient and begin a cleaning before the dentist is physically present in the clinical area. Further, a dental hygienist has no way to perform screenings or other preventive measures in the community setting outside of direct supervision of a dentist, of which Mississippi has very few outside of metropolitan areas.
The Oral Health Workforce Research Center performed workforce research across the nation in recent years and concluded that, “Scopes of practice which allow dental hygienists to provide services to patients in public health settings without burdensome supervision or prescriptive requirements appear to increase access to educational and preventive care.”
Further, Governor Phil Bryant commissioned a Rural Health Task Force to analyze ways that Mississippi can improve its rural healthcare, and one of the many suggestions included that the Mississippi State Board of Dental Examiners investigate ways that dental hygienists can operate more freely in the state and allow dentists and dental hygienists to have more flexibility in their collaboration.
So what change took place to improve these problems? The Board voted to change Regulation 13 to allow dental hygienists to move from direct supervision to general supervision under specific guidelines to ensure patient safety and compliance.
Allowing dental hygienists to practice under general supervision will free dentists from direct supervision and allow them to optimize patient care by focusing on patients with needs greater than the scope of practice of dental hygienists, fulfilling the need recommended by HHS as well as the Governor’s Rural Health Task Force.
This change also reflects the recommendation that the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) presented less than one year ago mentioning that, “states should consider changes to their scope-of-practice statutes to allow all healthcare providers to practice to the top of their license, utilizing their full skill set.”
Since this change was passed by the Mississippi State Board of Dental Examiners, both dentists and dental hygienists alike have praised the decision and are excited for the opportunities that may unfold as a result.
The change will go before the Occupational Licensing Review Commission (OLRC), consisting of the Mississippi Governor, Secretary of State, and Attorney General. For any dentists or dental hygienists that would like to share their support for this change, they may send correspondence to Chris Hutchinson at executivedirector@dentalboard.ms.gov.
We are excited to see how Mississippi moves forward in oral health access and quality-based outcomes as a result of this positive change.