As a child, Rhonda Schwalbe was fascinated by mouths.
"When she was little, she was always feeling around in our mouths, pulling on our lips, sticking her fingers in there," said her mother, Jean Schwalbe. "She had a little toy nurse's kit, and she would climb up with the stethoscope and tell us to open our mouth."
Schwalbe was poking around in her mother's mouth again the other day, but this time she was getting college credit for it. Her mother and father, Jon, both drove hours from Manitowoc, Wis., to Normandale Community College in Bloomington, where Rhonda is a second-year student in the dental hygiene program. Along with more than a dozen other patients, the Schwalbes were getting an exam and a cleaning in the Normandale dental hygiene clinic.
Normandale is one of only six Minnesota community colleges with a dental hygiene program. The college recently won a $1.6 million federal grant to lead an effort to improve hygienist training and increase access to dental care in underserved areas of Minnesota.
Minnesota has a shortage of hygienists in rural areas of the state. In addition, waves of baby boomer dentists are expected to be retiring in the coming years.
The solution? Step up training for licensed dental therapists and advanced dental therapists. These are hygienists who can also perform simple dental procedures like fillings and extractions under a dentist's supervision. The concept is similar to physician assistants and certified nurse practitioners, who now handle many simple medical treatments that once required an M.D.
"Dentists are retiring. Who's going to replace them?" said Colleen Brickle, dean of health sciences at Normandale. Brickle, who began her own career as a dental hygienist, is stressing to students the opportunities available to those who continue for advanced training beyond their associate degree.
The college has a dual enrollment program with Metro State University that allows students to work on their bachelor's and associate's degrees simultaneously, and seamlessly transition to a master's program. Under the grant, that program will be expanded to other community colleges and universities within the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities system.