Browser Cookies
This site uses cookies necessary to properly function. By closing this popup, clicking a link or continuing to browse otherwise, you agree to the use of cookies. View our policies.

Dental Hygiene Competencies

The Federation of Dental Hygiene Regulators of Canada™ (FDHRC™) published the Entry-to-Practice Canadian Competencies for Dental Hygienists in November 2021.

The project was launched in December 2019 with the goal of developing a single up-to-date set of national entry-to-practice competencies for dental hygienists, building from those developed in 2010 by the Canadian Dental Hygienists Association. As such, the competencies are an updated set of the 2010 version rather than a complete re-write of the original publication.

The FDHRC™ worked collaboratively with consultants from CamProf Inc. on this project which involved a wide variety of partners, interested parties and dental hygienists from across Canada. Regulators, educators, representatives from the National Dental Hygiene Certification Board™ (NDHCB™), the Commission on Dental Accreditation of Canada (CDAC), and the Canadian Dental Hygienists Association (CDHA) were all involved in the project.

It is the FDHRC’s™ goal that the new competencies will be used across Canada for a wide variety of purposes, including:

  • designing educational dental hygiene programs, accreditation, examinations/assessments, and continuing professional development offerings;
  • regulating dental hygienists at entry-to-practice, re-entry, and continuing competence; and
  • comparing dental hygiene credentials, including internationally.

The FDHRC™ is working collaboratively with all the parties who will be implementing the new competencies. Two committees have been formed to support the implementation: the Competency Implementation Advisory Committee and the Education Advisory Committee.

Reconnaissance territoriale

Le bureau de la FORHDCMC est situé sur le territoire ancestral non cédé de la Nation algonquine Anishinaabe. Depuis des temps immémoriaux, les Algonquins entretiennent avec ce territoire une relation particulière et réciproque qui perdure encore aujourd’hui. La FORHDCMC reconnaît sans réserve les droits inhérents aux terres et territoires des Algonquins tels qu’ils sont énoncés à l’article 35 de la Loi constitutionnelle de 1982 du Canada, ainsi que dans la Déclaration des Nations Unies sur les droits des peuples autochtones, laquelle est inscrite dans diverses lois de ce que l’on appelle aujourd’hui communément le Canada.

La version intégrale de l’énoncé de reconnaissance territoriale de la FORHDCMC peut être consultée ici.