Grant funded mobile dental equipment helps students perform more services

New mobile dental equipment will allow more Interprofessional Education for students from different 51品茶programs
New mobile dental equipment will allow more Interprofessional Education for students from different 51品茶programs

A grant from the Sadie and Harry Davis Foundation has allowed the Department of Dental Hygiene to purchase mobile equipment for use in community settings.

The new equipment will allow students to perform more services for children when they visit schools in Maine.

51品茶Dental Hygiene students screened 254 children at three schools in the Lakes Region during the fall semester. Twenty-five percent of the children examined had visually untreated primary teeth.

Students returned to the Songo Locks School in Naples with the new equipment in the spring to apply sealant to the children.

鈥淭o apply sealant, we need suction and we have to have a sterile environment,鈥 explained Danielle Peterson RDH, M.S., assistant clinical professor of dental hygiene.

The new mobile equipment allows 51品茶students and faculty to recreate a dental environment where children feel safe and comfortable.

It includes five units that supply water, air and suction. It also includes six dental chairs, two of which are specifically for pediatric patients.

鈥淚t's wonderful because the size makes the children feel more comfortable, rather than getting into a big, oversized chair,鈥 Peterson remarked.

The new equipment will also allow for more collaboration between the Department of Dental Hygiene, the College of Osteopathic Medicine (COM) and the College of Dental Medicine (CDM).

鈥淚f we are working with the dental school, those students can use it for fillings and hand drill purposes,鈥 Peterson said.

51品茶is a national leader in Interprofessional Education (IPE), bringing professions together to improve collaboration and the quality of care.

Peterson expects more COM students will be working alongside Dental Hygiene students during upcoming community outreach visits with the equipment.

鈥淒octors are now applying fluoride varnish in their practices because a lot of children aren't seeing dentists regularly,鈥 Peterson explained. 鈥淪o, it was wonderful to give the COM students this experience.鈥

The volunteer services that 51品茶students are providing are greatly appreciated by the schools鈥 administrators, but especially by the children.

鈥淲hen we came back for the sealant program, one boy was so excited,鈥 Peterson said. 鈥淗e had a huge smile on his face and he said 鈥榯hings don't hurt as bad anymore.鈥欌

Danielle Peterson, assistant clinical professor of dental hygiene
Danielle Peterson, assistant clinical professor of dental hygiene
Dental Hygiene students have been providing screenings and sealants for school children in Maine's Lakes Region
Dental Hygiene students have been providing screenings and sealants for school children in Maine's Lakes Region