AN ACT RELATING TO ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES -- LICENSES GENERALLY
Arizona creates a new oral preventive assistant role trained for supervised, limited supragingival cleaning on select patients to expand access.
Arizona creates a new oral preventive assistant role trained for supervised, limited supragingival cleaning on select patients to expand access.
Status: Chaptered / Approved by Governor March 31, 2025
Statute added: Arizona Revised Statutes § 32-1291.02 (Title 32, Chapter 11, Article 4)
Reporting requirement repealed effective June 30, 2029.
Purpose
- Establishes a new category of dental worker, an “oral preventive assistant,” defines required qualifications and scope of practice, prescribes supervision and patient-notification requirements, and directs limited data collection and reporting to assess the program.
Key provisions
- Training and prerequisites
- To practice as an oral preventive assistant, a dental assistant must complete a board‑approved training course of at least 120 hours of didactic and clinical instruction with patients at a “qualifying institution.”
- Before taking that course, the dental assistant must:
- Hold current CPR (cardiopulmonary resuscitation) certification;
- Hold board‑approved certifications in both coronal polishing and radiography;
- Either hold current national board certification in dental assisting OR have completed a dental assisting educational program accredited by a recognized state or national accreditor.
- “Qualifying institution” = institution of higher education (including community college) with a dental or dental hygiene program accredited by the Commission on Dental Accreditation (CODA) or successor.
Scope of practice and limits
Supervision, documentation and posting
Data collection and temporary reporting
Who is affected
- Dental assistants seeking expanded, credentialed duties (new training and certification pathway).
- Dentists and dental hygienists (supervisory responsibilities, supervision limits, reporting/discipline exposure).
- Dental education providers (must offer approved 120‑hour programs at accredited institutions).
- Patients (expanded access to coronal scaling under specified limits; required disclosure when care provided by an assistant).
- State Board of Dental Examiners (administration, data collection and reporting).
Potential impacts
- Workforce: May increase capacity for basic supragingival prophylaxis in dental settings by delegating specific tasks to trained assistants, with constraints to protect higher‑risk patients.
- Access: Could improve service availability in some settings, while supervision ratios and patient restrictions will limit scope.
- Oversight: Adds documentation, posting and reporting obligations intended to monitor outcomes and complaints; reporting requirement is temporary (repealed mid‑2029).
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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