Essential functions
Preparation and training to become a dentist requires each student to understand and meet the technical standards required for admission, continuation and graduation as identified below.
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Preparation and training to become a dentist requires each student to understand and meet the technical standards required for admission, continuation and graduation as identified below.
Faculty have developed course requirements and activities to provide critical elements of training. It is expected that students will participate in all course activities and must not be subject to any legal condition that would bar participation (including but not limited to lectures, seminars, laboratories, clinics, physical examinations, patient procedures) and adhere to individual clinical site rules and regulations as well as Bitonte College of Dentistry policies regarding these activities.
A candidate for the D.D.S. degree must be able to demonstrate intellectual-conceptual, integrative, and quantitative abilities; skills in observation, communication, and motor functions; and mature behavioral and social attributes. Technological compensation and/or reasonable accommodation can be made for some disabilities in some of these areas, but a candidate should be able to perform in a reasonably independent manner without a trained intermediary. The use of a trained intermediary means that a candidate’s judgment must be mediated by someone else’s power of selection and observation.
The following Essential Functions describe the non-academic requirements for admission, progression, and graduation from the College of Dentistry program at Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED). The NEOMED College of Dentistry provides this description of the Essential Functions to inform prospective and enrolled students of the skills, expectations, physical abilities, and behavioral characteristics required to successfully complete the requirements of the dental education program at NEOMED and to provide oral health care services. Preparation and training to become a dentist requires each applicant and current student to carefully review, understand, and meet the Essential Functions identified below without or with a reasonable accommodation(s) that does not fundamentally alter the curriculum.
NEOMED embraces diversity and recognizes the value that individuals with disabilities add to the student body and institution and has included disabilities specifically in its diversity statement. As such, the College of Dentistry complies with the requirements of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and the American with Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 and will endeavor to make reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities who are otherwise qualified to perform the essential functions of the curriculum. Applicants and students who would like to request accommodations to perform the essential functions should contact Accessibility Services at accommodations@380cebbe0d.nxcli.io or call 330.325.6756.
A candidate or student, (hereafter referred to as “student”) for the Doctor of Dental Surgery (D.D.S.) degree must be able to demonstrate intellectual-conceptual, integrative, and quantitative abilities; skills in observation, communication, motor functions; ethics and professionalism; and mature behavioral and social attributes. While technological compensation, interpreters and/or other reasonable accommodation may be made for some disabilities, a student must be able to perform in a reasonably independent manner using his or her own intellect, judgment, and diagnostic reasoning skills.
General: A student must possess sufficient behavioral, social, and emotional skills and the psychological health required to meet their own needs and the needs of others, the full use of their intellectual abilities, the exercise of good judgment, the prompt completion of all responsibilities attendant to the diagnosis and care of patients, and the development of mature, sensitive, and effective relationships with patients, faculty, staff, and classmates.
Specific:
General: A student must be able to communicate effectively, sensitively, and efficiently with patients, faculty, staff, peers, and all members of the health care team.
Specific:
General: A student must maintain and advocate for the standards of conduct for ethics and professionalism as set forth in the American Dental Association’s Principles of Ethics and Code of Professional Conduct and the NEOMED Expectations of Student Conduct and Professional Behavior, as well as the policies, procedures and protocols as outlined in the NEOMED Compass.
Specific:
General: A student must be able to develop intellectual, cognitive, conceptual, and executive functions and apply these skills in measurement, reasoning, analysis, synthesis of information, problem solving and critical thinking at the level required of a health care professional.
Specific:
General: Students must possess sufficient motor functions, physical mobility, strength, equilibrium, and coordination required to perform basic and advanced tasks that are requirements in the didactic, preclinical, laboratory, and clinical settings or essential to providing oral health care to patients. 137
Specific:
General: A student must be able to acquire a predetermined level of required information through demonstrations and experiences in basic and dental sciences courses including didactic, preclinical, laboratory and clinical activities.
A student must be able to observe a patient accurately, at a distance and close up, interpreting nonverbal communications while performing dental operations or administering medications. Observation necessitates the functional use of the sense of vision and somatic sensation and is enhanced by the functional use of the sense of smell.
Specific: