ATSU-ASDOH joins elite group in training community health workers
Posted: November 1, 2011
The American Dental Association (ADA) and ATSU-ASDOH announced in March the launch of the Community Dental Health Coordinator (CDHC) education and training program based at ATSU’s Mesa, Ariz., campus.
The program will provide training for community health workers with emphasis on oral health education, prevention, and helping patients who may normally face barriers to care, receive dental care.
ATSU-ASDOH is one of four university-affiliated dental schools providing the CDHC program, which is jointly sponsored by the ADA. Other universities offering programs in conjunction with their dental schools include Philadelphia’s Temple University, the University of Oklahoma, and the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA).
In their initial phase of training in Arizona, students, who are practicing dental assistants and dental hygienists, will complete 12 months of online coursework administered by Rio Salado College in Tempe, Ariz. Upon successfully completing the didactic portion of their training, they begin six-month internships at ATSU-ASDOH. Students receive a certificate upon completion of the program.
Temple University’s Kornberg School of Dentistry trains students to work in inner cities; the University of Oklahoma trains students to serve in remote rural areas; and students currently at the UCLA School of Dentistry are training to work in American Indian communities. The UCLA CDHC program will end with the graduation of its second class of students in fall 2011. The final group of students training to work in American Indian communities will begin and complete their training in the ATSU-ASDOH program.
“We’re excited to open this final phase of the CDHC pilot project at the Arizona School of Dentistry & Oral Health,” said ADA President Raymond F. Gist, D.D.S. “It will leverage the university’s many ties to the American Indian community and its proximity to both Rio Salado College and the southwestern tribal communities in which some CDHCs will work.”
ATSU-ASDOH has the largest contingency of tribally enrolled American Indian dental students of any dental school in the nation, with a 100 percent graduation rate for Native students. All of ATSU-ASDOH’s Native graduates practice in Native communities.