In its letter, the Oral Health Pandemic Response Workgroup asks the federal government to take certain actions to remove legal barriers that deter dental providers from choosing to participate as vaccinators where they may be allowed by some states. The letter also calls on the Governors of those states where dental providers are currently not allowed to administer the COVID-19 vaccine to include them as authorized vaccinators, thereby significantly increasing the number of authorized vaccinators in their state.
Currently, 26 states and territories allow dentists to administer COVID-19 tests, and 25 states allow them to administer the vaccine. Only 14 states allow dental hygienists to give the vaccine.
“The COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on our nation has been staggering,” the Workgroup wrote to officials. “This devastation has exposed long-standing health and social inequities across our country, including among Hispanic, Black, Indigenous and other people of color; residents of rural areas; and people with disabilities. These groups are disproportionately likely to face challenges in getting a COVID-19 vaccine.”
Oral health professionals, who have been significantly underused in response to this national emergency, are uniquely situated to ensure underserved communities are able to access the vaccine. This workforce – including more than 200,000 licensed dentists and more than 220,000 licensed dental hygienists – is distributed across the country in every community.
Each year almost 30 million Americans visit a dentist but not a physician. Oral health professionals have the necessary education and experience to serve as vaccinators. Authorizing them to administer COVID-19 tests and vaccines would provide them with the opportunity to become engaged in the national effort to end this pandemic and, importantly, could increase needed access points for vaccinating the population.
Oral health professionals can also serve as trusted sources of accurate information to promote distribution of the vaccine. They can be especially impactful in hard-to-reach areas and with people at the highest risk of experiencing the devastating impacts of this virus.
A list of signatories to the letter is below:
- American Association of Dental Boards
- American Dental Association
- American Dental Hygienists Association
- Arcora Foundation
- Asian Resources, Inc.
- Association of State and Territorial Dental Directors
- California Pan-Ethnic Health Network
- Community Catalyst
- Dental Trade Alliance
- DentaQuest
- DentaQuest Partnership for Oral Health Advancement
- Hispanic Dental Association
- National Dental Association
- National Rural Health Association
- Oral Health Progress and Equity Network
- Project Accessible Oral Health
- Santa Fe Group
The Oral Health Pandemic Response Workgroup is an ad hoc gathering of executives across the dental landscape. We represent providers (dentists, dental hygienists and dental assistants), dental plans, dental service organizations, dental practices, payers, dental supply manufacturers, state dental boards, community clinics, the public health community, government, academia, philanthropy, advocates, and members of the community (including racial and ethnic minority groups, people with disabilities, and rural Americans).
The DentaQuest Partnership for Oral Health Advancement is a nonprofit organization working to transform the broken health care system and enable better health through oral health. Through strategic grantmaking, research and care improvement initiatives, we drive meaningful change at the local, state and national levels. The DentaQuest Partnership is affiliated with DentaQuest, a leading U.S. oral health enterprise with a mission to improve the oral health of all.