Optimizing Patient Intake for Sedation Dentistry
Learn how to improve your patient intake and assessment process to better identify medical, psychological and anesthesia risks, leading to safer, more confident care. (1 CE Credit)
Learn how to improve your patient intake and assessment process to better identify medical, psychological and anesthesia risks, leading to safer, more confident care. (1 CE Credit)
Learn how to safely and confidently treat patients with special health care needs in private practice. This course offers practical strategies to reduce hospital reliance and improve access—while finding fulfillment in compassionate care. (1 CE Credit)
With thousands of OTC oral care products on the market, patients often feel overwhelmed. This self-paced course equips your team to confidently guide product choices using trusted criteria like the ADA Seal of Acceptance. (1 CE Credit)
Learn how ICD diagnostic codes apply to dentistry. This course explains code structure, purpose, and practical use in dental practice—helping you improve documentation, streamline claims, and align with global health standards. (1 CE Credit)
This course helps dental professionals who treat Medicare beneficiaries navigate the new CMS requirements for Medicare billing that took effect July 1, 2025. (1 CE Credit)
As the source of dental procedure codes, the ADA has answered thousands of members’ coding questions over the years. Based on this experience, the ADA created this training course to ensure your dental team understands CDT codes and how to use them correctly…
This training program from the ADA — the official source of dental procedure codes — immerses learners in key coding concepts and the ADA Dental Claim form through real-world clinical scenarios. Be assured that your dental team can use the codes correctly and reduce claim rejections. (4 CE Credits)
This course is designed to address the most frequently asked questions surrounding CDT codes in dental practices. The session focuses on real-world questions submitted by dental professionals, offering clarity and expert insight into common areas of confusion. (1.25 CE Credits)
Discover the future of regenerative periodontics! Learn to reverse gum recession, erase black triangles, and end tooth sensitivity—all with a nonsurgical injection. (1 CE Credit)
Stand up for science and smiles! Learn the basics of water fluoridation, debunk common myths, and become an effective advocate in your community. Help preserve this proven, cost-effective tool for preventing tooth decay.
This one-hour presentation addresses ethical considerations and issues that may arise when treating children from their first visit to a dental office until they reach the age of consent. (.5 CE Credits)
Focusing on single implants affected by peri-implantitis, this course provides a comprehensive understanding of implant maintenance procedures. (1 CE Credits)
Gain a comprehensive understanding of implant maintenance procedures, with a focus on full-arch removable implant-supported dentures. (1 CE Credit)
This engaging session invites dentists and their entire teams to go behind the scenes with the Current Dental Terminology (CDT). (1 CE Credit)
Discover the fascinating history behind the CDT Code, gain a clear understanding of its structure, and learn how it is maintained and updated. (1 CE Credit)
Learn how to adapt your dental practice to better support patients with Alzheimer’s disease. This course covers key communication strategies and practical techniques to provide compassionate, effective oral care tailored to their unique needs. (1 CE Credit)
An evidence-based framework will be presented to help answer important patient questions around constructing an oral care routine for optimizing oral health.
Dental hygiene is the second largest and only other production center beyond the doctor in dental practices. Yet, the dental hygiene department has been marginalized to a large degree in regard to reaching potential for practice production.
This course provides dental team members with information on identifying caries-causing factors and assessing a patient’s risk for developing dental caries.
This course introduces the dental professional to the important role of fluoride in the prevention and control of dental caries. Systemic and topical forms of fluoride delivery are discussed as options for the majority of patients, and professional forms of fluoride delivery are discussed as sometimes-necessary measures for high-risk or caries-active patients.