Self-Service Courses
Dental Training Courses
HealthFirst, in collaboration with MB2 Dental, has curated a selection of premium training courses to help dental professionals prepare for emergencies, ensure proper infection control and get prepared for an OSHA or HIPAA audit.
Medical Emergency Courses
Medical emergencies can strike at any moment. Be prepared for our selection of courses designed to help your clinic be prepared.
How To Do A Mock Emergency Drill
Medical emergencies, sedation emergencies, and pediatric emergencies ARE going to happen in the dental office.
Patient Red Flags and What Emergency Drugs One Might Have to Use
Patients are living longer, and they have gotten smarter when it comes to dental treatment. Seniors are seeking more advanced dentistry, and as a result, they have become a very large part of dental practice. There is no getting around this fact, if you practice dentistry, you will treat senior patients.
Emergency Preparedness in Your Practice
This course will explore essential strategies for preparing medical practices to effectively handle emergencies.
Medical Emergency Preparedness (MEP) for the DSO
Every dentist (regardless of solo, group or DSO practice) can expect to be involved in the diagnosis and treatment of medical emergencies during your practice lifetime. Dentists perform daily clinical procedures that could lead to a medical emergency, or they may occur by chance in the office.
Enhancing Patient Safety in Dental Anesthesiology
This course explores the critical aspects of patient safety in dental anesthesia, with a focus on identifying and managing complications.
The Importance of a Thorough Medical History for the Dental Patient
Medical emergencies in the dental office can many times be avoided by a review of a patient’s medical history, medications, and allergies.
Management of Medical Emergencies in a Dental Environment
Medical emergencies can and do happen in the dental office environment.
Emergency Drugs: Is Your Office Prepared?
Medical emergencies and sedation emergencies can, do, and will occur at dental offices. Emergency drug kits contain the medications required for many such emergencies, including the (often multiple doses of) epinephrine needed for anaphylaxis, the nitroglycerin called for in cases of angina, and the albuterol used to treat asthmatics.
Infection Prevention Courses
Patients rely on your team to have a safe and sterile environment. Discover if your clinic is properly sanitizing and learn techniques for improving your current infection control program.
Ensuring Safe Dental Waterlines: Staying Compliant with the Latest DUWL Testing and Treatment Requirements
Dental Unit Waterlines (DUWLs) can harbor harmful bacteria if not properly maintained, posing serious infection risks to patients.
Where Does Dental Water Safety Fit Into Your Dental Safety Program?
Dental units contain a hidden system of tubes that carry slow-moving water.
Infection Control Measures to Keep Your Patients and Team Healthy
Dentistry’s infection control protocols have always been of great importance; however, they were often left in the shadows of as other “priorities” surfaced in our day to day operations.
Don’t Get Caught Off Guard: Drive Practice Safety and Compliance with a Proactive Approach to Infection Control
Do you realize that infection control isn’t OSHA? Do you realize that infection control is the law? Many people think because the CDC isn’t a regulatory agency, that the guidelines they put out are just that, and don’t have to be followed.
Compliance Training Courses
Be prepared for an OSHA or HIPAA audit and avoid costly fines.
Jump Start your 2025 with Office OSHA & HIPAA Compliance Training
The start of a new year with new resolutions is the best time to re-commit to practicing dentistry with the highest standards of patient safety and privacy practices.
OSHA Citations in Dental Settings and Lessons Learned
Compliance with OSHA standards is a benchmark for safety in dental settings. Although OSHA standards are applicable to worker safety, a safe environment promotes patient safety as well.
Common HIPAA Dangers within a Dental Office, and How to Avoid Them!
As dentists, we are no longer just in the “tooth business”. We are also in the information business. We collect and use vast amounts of personal health information about our patients.
OSHA Compliance: Can What You Don’t Know Hurt You?
This course will provide a broad overview of the federal regulatory agencies in the United States and their requirements for the safe practice of dentistry. When an employer or employee is unaware of rules and regulations set forth by the FDA, EPA, OSHA, and the Department of Health and Human Services, the dental office opens itself to potential criminal or civil legal violations.
More than Compliance, OSHA through a Post-Pandemic Lens
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 established the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) whose charge was, and still is, to enforce protective workplace safety and health standards for the U.S. work force.