Dental patients have the right to make an informed decision about their dental care. It is the responsibility of the Dental Assistant to make sure they know the facts about the procedures, the alternative options, and any risks involved in the procedures. Dental patients have the right to receive care from qualified staff members. Most dental offices will provide the licensing and credentials of staff members upon patient request.
The right to receive quality care is important to patients. Dental Assistants can do their part by taking the time to properly clean all dental tools and equipment. Standard sterilization procedures need to be followed accurately. Patients have the right to ask questions and receive informed decisions about the care they receive. Dental Assistants have the responsibility of keeping the lines of communication open. They need to be approachable by patients.
A patient has the right to refuse treatment or discontinue treatment at any time. The Dental Assistant needs to be respectful of this choice. However, the Dental Assistant has the responsibility to inform the patient of the health risks involved with doing so. Those patients wanting to continue care have the right to be seen at scheduled appointments and for a detailed treatment plan to be carefully outlined, and then followed.
Emergency situations do occur. Patients have the right to be seen as soon as possible. In the mean time, the Dental Assistant needs to do everything possible to reduce the pain and make the patient comfortable. Dental care can be expensive. Patients have the right to receive an itemized cost of treatment prior to accepting any dental services.
All patients want to be treated with dignity and respect. The patient who comes in with poor oral care habits doesn't want the Dental Assistant to ask them rude questions about the last time they brushed their teeth. However, it is important for the Dental Assistant to express concern about the patient's oral health habits, and provide education to help the patient develop better oral care practices.
Dental patients have the right to confidentiality. Dental Assistants need to keep information about procedures and those coming in for them to themselves. No one wants everyone in town to know they had two cavities or that they got their teeth whitened. Confidentially is very important to individuals in all areas, and their dental care is no different. A patient has the right to request copies of all information in their file at any time for their own use.
All patients have the right to express their concern over the dental care they received. They have the right to file a complaint against the Dental Assistant or other staff with the State Dental Board. Each state has their own policies and procedures for investigating complaints. The standard procedure includes obtaining the complaint in writing, sending a copy of the complaint to the dental facility, interviewing witnesses to the event, and making an informed decision on how to handle the complaint.
Dental Assistants need to be fully aware to patient rights. It is easy to get caught up in the procedures and duties of the dental profession. However, the satisfaction of the patient is the key to providing quality service and maintaining ongoing relationships with patients. Dental Assistants can do their part by providing patients with an approachable individual that they can discuss their needs, ideas, thoughts, and concerns over their dental care with. In that regard, a Dental Assistant can serve as a lesson between the patient and the other dental staff.
Latest news and information
Rights groups: Doctors discriminating against sex-change patients in Israel Ha'aretz "The ties between a doctor and the transgender patient are complex, because many doctors still have stereotypes, and there are doctors who treat without ... |
Devil is in the details on care act Natchez Democrat Prior to enactment of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, the State of Louisiana had an existing high risk pool in place. ... |
Cape Cod Hospital inquest winds down Boston Herald But the state Department of Public Health has cited the hospital for a federal violation of patient rights in the case. The state Medical Examiner's Office ... |
Antisoma's preliminary results for the year ended 30 June 2010 MarketWatch (press release) In March we initiated a 90-patient phase IIb study in patients with AML. This trial follows an earlier 60-patient randomised phase II trial in AML, ... |
![]() New York Times (blog) | Answers About Medicare: Part 3 New York Times (blog) Medicare may pay for nonemergency in-patient services in a foreign hospital (and related physician and ambulance costs), if it is closer to your residence ... |
![]() 89.3 KPCC | Pharmacy Chain to Pay HHS $1 Million for Privacy Violations MedPage Today ... a complaint by the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) and the FTC when a number of videos recorded by television media stations showed patients' prescriptions ... Rite Aid to Pay $1 Million for Potential Patient Privacy Breaches 13 WTHRRite Aid fined $1M following WTHR investigation Rite Aid will pay $1M for HIPAA privacy abuses |
Feds propose stronger patient privacy rights FierceHealthcare The US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) proposed a new federal healthcare information privacy rule yesterday that would expand patients' rights ... Feds propose rules to strengthen patient privacy rights HHS Proposes Patient Privacy Rules HHS pitches new patient privacy safeguards |
Angiotech Pharmaceuticals and partner Athersys announce positive results from ... MarketWatch (press release) The study results, which represent at least four months of post-treatment patient data, demonstrate that MultiStem was well tolerated at all dose levels and ... |
JAMA: Medical home model can boost patient safety Health Imaging & IT The patient-centered medical home (PCMH) model can potentially address many current safety concerns in primary care, wrote Mark Graber, MD, of Stony Brook ... Reform Of Primary Care Could Reduce Diagnostic Errors |
AMAG Pharmaceuticals Announces Financial Results for the Second Quarter and ... MarketWatch (press release) The estimated 1400-patient program consists of two phase III studies, one comparing treatment with Feraheme to placebo, and the other comparing treatment ... |