College Scholarship Search College Search Career Exploration College Admissions Articles Financial Aid and Student Loan Calculators Compare Student Loans
Username Password
Search:

OverviewNature of WorkKnowledge AreasSkills Utilized
Job ActivitiesAbilitiesJob ConditionsWork SatisfactionEducation/Training

Nature of the Work

Dental hygienists remove soft and hard deposits from teeth, teach patients how to practice good oral hygiene, and provide other preventive dental care. They examine patients' teeth and gums, recording the presence of diseases or abnormalities.

Dental hygienists use an assortment of different tools to complete their tasks. Hand and rotary instruments and ultrasonic devices are used to clean and polish teeth, including removing calculus, stains, and plaque. Hygienists use x-ray machines to take dental pictures, and sometimes develop the film. They may use models of teeth to explain oral hygiene, perform root planning as a periodontal therapy, or apply cavity-preventative agents such as fluorides and pit and fissure sealants. In some States, hygienists are allowed to administer anesthetics, while in others they administer local anesthetics using syringes. Some States also allow hygienists to place and carve filling materials, temporary fillings, and periodontal dressings; remove sutures; and smooth and polish metal restorations.

Dental hygienists also help patients develop and maintain good oral health. For example, they may explain the relationship between diet and oral health or inform patients how to select toothbrushes and show them how to brush and floss their teeth.

Hygienists sometimes make a diagnosis and other times may prepare clinical and laboratory diagnostic tests for the dentist to interpret. Hygienists sometimes work chair side with the dentist during treatment.

Work environment. Dental hygienists work in clean, well-lighted offices. Important health safeguards include strict adherence to proper radiological procedures and the use of appropriate protective devices when administering anesthetic gas. Dental hygienists also wear safety glasses, surgical masks, and gloves to protect themselves and patients from infectious diseases.

Flexible scheduling is a distinctive feature of this job. Full-time, part-time, evening, and weekend schedules are widely available. Dentists frequently hire hygienists to work only 2 or 3 days a week, so hygienists may hold jobs in more than one dental office. More than half of all dental hygienists worked part time—less than 35 hours a week.


Common Tasks

1.Clean calcareous deposits, accretions, and stains from teeth and beneath margins of gums, using dental instruments.
2.Feel and visually examine gums for sores and signs of disease.
3.Chart conditions of decay and disease for diagnosis and treatment by dentist.
4.Feel lymph nodes under patient's chin to detect swelling or tenderness that could indicate presence of oral cancer.
5.Apply fluorides and other cavity preventing agents to arrest dental decay.
6.Examine gums, using probes, to locate periodontal recessed gums and signs of gum disease.
7.Expose and develop x-ray film.
8.Provide clinical services and health education to improve and maintain oral health of school children.
9.Remove excess cement from coronal surfaces of teeth.
10.Make impressions for study casts.
11.Place, carve, and finish amalgam restorations.
12.Administer local anesthetic agents.
13.Conduct dental health clinics for community groups to augment services of dentist.
14.Remove sutures and dressings.
15.Place and remove rubber dams, matrices, and temporary restorations.

[Back to Top]