Changeflow GovPing Healthcare Oregon Health Authority Highlights School-Based...
Routine Notice Added Final

Oregon Health Authority Highlights School-Based Dental Programs

Favicon for www.oregon.gov index.aspx
Published February 27th, 2026
Detected March 17th, 2026
Email

Summary

The Oregon Health Authority (OHA) is highlighting school-based dental programs that provide preventive care to rural students. These programs, operated by Community Health Centers of Benton and Linn Counties and the Healthy Kids Outreach Program, aim to improve children's oral health and reduce emergency room visits.

What changed

The Oregon Health Authority (OHA) issued a notice highlighting two school-based dental programs that are bringing preventive oral healthcare to students in rural Oregon communities. The notice specifically spotlights the Healthy Kids Outreach Program (HKOP) in Douglas County and the Community Health Centers of Benton and Linn Counties, both of which utilize mobile dental units to serve students in underserved areas. This initiative aligns with national Children's Dental Health Month and OHA's strategic goals to expand access to preventive services and address health inequities.

This notice serves as an informational update and does not impose new regulatory requirements or deadlines on regulated entities. It highlights successful community-based initiatives and their positive impact on children's health. Compliance officers should note this as an example of public health efforts in the state, particularly concerning access to care for vulnerable populations. No specific actions are required from regulated entities based on this notice.

Source document (simplified)

Prevention on wheels: School-based dental programs reach rural Oregon students

Site Navigation *February 27, 2026*

*Media toolkit: W atch a video highlighting two dental programs here*

PORTLAND, Ore. - As February marks national Children’s Dental Health Month, Oregon Health Authority (OHA) is highlighting several dental programs that bring preventive care directly to the state’s students, helping children receive services early and reducing the need for emergency treatment later.

OHA is spotlighting the work of the Community Health Centers of Benton and Linn Counties, and the Healthy Kids Outreach Program (HKOP) through the Mercy Foundation, the philanthropic arm of CHI Mercy Health’s Mercy Medical Center, a member of CommonSpirit Health, for expanding school-based dental care in rural communities. Both organizations are certified by OHA.

In Roseburg and many surrounding areas of Douglas County, two HKOP mobile dental units travel to 38 schools from Oakland to Canyonville and down to Glendale, bringing care directly to children who might otherwise go without.

About half of families in Douglas County live at or below 200% of the federal poverty guideline and roughly half of children do not have health insurance. As a result, some families turn to hospital emergency departments for urgent dental needs.

“We are tied to the hospital; we can evaluate what population is landing in the emergency room,” said Trina Simmie, RN, with HKOP through the Mercy Foundation. “When we first started, somewhere around 60 to 80 youth were landing in the emergency room with urgent abscesses or urgent needs.”

The program’s focus on prevention, a central theme of national Children’s Dental Health Month, aims to reduce those visits by identifying problems early and providing screenings, sealants, fluoride treatments and referrals.

In Corvallis, the Community Health Centers of Benton and Linn Counties also operate a dental van that serves 34 schools across rural communities.

Expanded Functions Dental Assistant Molly Perino manages the program and said reaching children early is critical. “It’s all connected,” she said. “It can affect kids in such a tremendous way, especially when they’re little. The earlier we get good habits and prevention started, the better off they are. A lot of our communities do not have fluoride in their water anymore, so this work is significant.”

Both programs collaborate with schools and local partners to remove barriers such as transportation, cost and provider shortages - challenges that are more pronounced in rural areas. Their work reflects OHA’s statewide focus during national Children’s Dental Health Month on prevention, education and improving access to care. Fostering healthy families and environments that promote health and well-being, (especially among communities most harmed by health inequities) is one of the goals of OHA’s 2025-2027 Strategic Plan.

Among the plan’s key strategies are implementing policies and procedures “that expand access to preventive health services and supports” as well as facilitating “equitable access to quality care.”

Program leaders emphasize that prevention not only improves children’s health but also reduces long-term costs for families and the health system.

“We really believe in prevention,” Simmie said. “Even though it’s not the money maker, it’s the money saver. It’s time to change our culture from putting out fires of chronic disease to one focused on prevention and the long game.”

For more on all of Oregon’s no-cost oral health programs in schools, visit this link.

###

Media contact

Erica Heartquist

OHA External Relations

PHD.Communications@oha.oregon.gov

Stay connected

Find us on Facebook
Follow Us on X
OHA YouTube Channel

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
State Health
Published
February 27th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Educational institutions
Geographic scope
State (Oregon)

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Public Health Children's Health

Get Healthcare alerts

Weekly digest. AI-summarized, no noise.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.

Get alerts for this source

We'll email you when index.aspx publishes new changes.

Free. Unsubscribe anytime.