Information for Future
Students
Dental
Read Before Applying
May 14
- Soft Launch
June 4
(Official
Submission
Start Date)
Deadline - Sept. 1
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Dental
Hygiene
New
Application
Process
Applications
accepted
from Nov. 1 -
Dec 31
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Dental
Lab Technology
Applications
accepted
until May 31
for Fall
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Degrees or
Certificates offered at
LSUHSC School of
Dentistry:
Doctor
of Dental Surgery
Dental
Hygiene
Dental
Laboratory Technology
Advanced
Education and Residency
Programs More...
Endodontics
General
Practice Residency
Oral
& Maxillofacial
Surgery
Orthodontics
Pediatric
Dentistry
Periodontics
Prosthodontics
Fellowships:
Dental Implants -
Periodontics
Dental Implants -
Prosthodontics
Special
Needs Dentistry
Externships:
Oral
Surgery
Pediatric
Dentistry
Background checks
are required on
all applicants accepted
into the LSUHSC School of
Dentistry (Dental, Dental
Hygiene, Dental Laboratory
Technology, and Advanced
Education programs). These
background checks are
performed by Certiphi.
Certiphi also performs the
background checks on the
LSUHSC medical school
applicants.
TECHNICAL STANDARDS FOR ADMISSION, ACADEMIC PROGRESSION, AND GRADUATION
The LSUHSC appreciates the unique nature of the curricula for each of the oral health degree programs offered by the School of Dentistry. In addition to proven academic ability and other relevant personal characteristics, the School of Dentistry expects all applicants and students of the Programs in Dentistry, Dental Hygiene, Dental Laboratory Technology and Advanced Education to possess and demonstrate the attributes, skills and abilities that will allow them to successfully complete their respective course of study and receive the full benefit of the education as noted below.
Physical health: The student must possess the physical health and stamina required to participate in the program of dental education. Example:
• Perform moderately taxing and repetitive work while paying attention to specific intricate detail. This work may require prolonged sitting, often in restrictive positions.
Intellectual skills: The student must have sufficient powers of intellect to acquire, assimilate, integrate, and apply information. Problem solving, a critical skill demanded of health professionals, requires the ability to measure, calculate, reason, analyze and synthesize. Examples:
• Comprehend and mentally visualize three-dimensional relationships and understand the spatial relationships of structures.
• Perform problem-solving and apply critical thinking skills in a timely manner for effective patient treatment.
Motor skills: The student should be able to execute motor movements that are reasonably required to provide oral health care and emergency treatment to patients that require coordination of both gross and fine muscular movements, equilibrium, and functional use of the senses of touch and vision. Examples:
• Demonstrate sufficient manual dexterity/motor function to elicit information from patients through such diagnostic procedures requiring the use of dental-specific instruments and through measures such as palpation, auscultation, and percussion.
• Perform emergency procedures such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation, application of pressure to control bleeding, the opening of obstructed airways, the suturing of simple wounds, and oral and maxillofacial surgical procedures.
Communication: The student must be able to communicate effectively with all members of the health care team to include patients, faculty, other health professionals and peers in both oral and written form. Examples:
• Communicate with patients to elicit information, detect changes in mood, activity and to establish therapeutic relationships.
• Retrieve information from literature, computerized databases and lectures and communicate concepts on written exams and in patient charts.
Sensory abilities: The student must be able to acquire a defined level of information as presented through didactic, laboratory and clinical experiences. Examples: • Acquire information conveyed through demonstrations, microscopic images and written documentation presented in images from paper, film, slides, video, and computer.
• Demonstrate the functional use of visual, auditory, and somatic sensation while using appropriate sensory modalities.
Behavioral qualities: The student must possess the emotional health and maturity required to demonstrate the required competencies of the curriculum. The student must display good judgment, and must behave in a professional, reliable, and responsible manner. Examples:
• Be adaptable and possess sufficient flexibility to function in new and stressful environments.
• Demonstrate appropriate motivation, integrity, compassion, and portray a genuine interest in caring for others.
EDUCATION REQUIREMENT FOR LICENSURE
The educational
requirement in
nearly all states is a DDS
or DMD degree from a
university-based dental
education program
accredited by the Commission
on Dental Accreditation
(CODA). References
to accreditation in
states' licensure
provisions relate to CODA
and no other agency. CODA
directly accredits
programs in the United
States, and indirectly
accredits dental education
programs in Canada through
a reciprocal agreement
with the Commission on
Dental Accreditation of
Canada (CDAC). Graduates
of accredited U.S. and
Canadian dental education
programs are eligible for
licensure in the United
States.
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