About Us Overview
Who Serves on the Board
The Nevada State Board of Dental Examiners is made up of 11 members appointed by the Governor.
The Board includes:
- 7 dentists who must be Nevada residents and must have practiced in Nevada for at least 5 years
- 1 dentist who represents the care of patients who are indigent, uninsured, or underinsured
- 3 dental hygienists who must be Nevada residents and must have practiced in Nevada for at least 5 years
- 1 public representative who may not be a dentist or dental hygienist and may not be related to a dentist or dental hygienist
What the Board Is Responsible For
The Board’s powers and duties are established in NRS 631.190. In general, the Board is responsible for:
- adopting regulations needed to carry out the Dental Practice Act
- creating committees and review panels and retaining professionals to support the Board’s work
- overseeing licensure
- maintaining the official register of licensees and other Board records
- supporting statewide oversight, including authorized review functions in dental offices and laboratories
How the Agency Is Staffed
The Board appoints the Executive Director and General Counsel and appoints Board Agents as needed to conduct specialized services to enforce NRS 631 and NAC 631.
The Executive Director hires and manages the agency staff responsible for daily operations and for carrying out the Board’s duties under NRS 631 and NAC 631.
The Nevada State Board of Dental Examiners delivers its public protection mission through a coordinated set of teams overseen by the Executive Director. Under the Board’s direction, the Executive Director manages day-to-day operations, aligns staff work to the requirements of NRS 631 and NAC 631, and ensures services are delivered consistently, professionally, and efficiently.
Board Members
Board Members provide governance and direction for the agency. They serve on committees and panels to develop and advance initiatives—moving work from committee recommendations to full Board consideration—and they act on official Board business during public Board meetings using the powers and duties granted under NRS 631.190.
Licensing Department
The Licensing Department supports applicants, licensees, and the public by managing:
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Individual professional licenses
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Permits that do not require an inspection or evaluation
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Certifications
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License verifications
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Information services and general licensing support
Legal | Compliance Department
The Legal | Compliance Department supports enforcement and compliance by managing:
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Complaints and intake
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Investigations
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Administrative proceedings (including disciplinary matters)
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Other legal and regulatory matters necessary to carry out the Board’s responsibilities
Program Support Department
The Program Support Department coordinates key program functions, including:
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Permits for individuals, businesses, or programs requiring an inspection or evaluation
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Continuing education provider and course administration
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Oversight of advanced educational programs used for advanced permitting
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Board meeting support and constituent services
Board Agents
Board Agents are qualified, licensed dental professionals engaged to perform specialized, clinically informed regulatory functions, including:
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Inspections for infection control standards
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Evaluations for anesthesia and sedation permitting and compliance
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Complaint-related case review, including participation as:
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Preliminary screening consultants
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Review panelists supporting patient case reviews at different stages of the complaint process
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Executive Department
The Executive Department manages the Board’s internal operations and organizational performance, including:
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Core administrative functions
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Financial management and oversight
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Process improvement and operational planning to guide the agency toward greater efficiency and accountability
The Nevada State Board of Dental Examiners traces its origins to 1895, when the Nevada Legislature passed Assembly Bill 52 to strengthen public protection by improving practitioner education and regulating the practice of dental surgery. That landmark law required dentists to hold a certificate to practice, established a Board of Examiners, authorized fees, and created penalties for violations.
Between 1895 and 1951, the Legislature refined and expanded Nevada’s dental regulatory framework:
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1905: Clarified examination requirements and required graduation from a reputable dental college.
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1943: Responded to workforce shortages during World War II by authorizing temporary licenses.
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1951: Enacted Assembly Bill 6, known as the Nevada Dental Act, which repealed prior dental statutes and comprehensively updated the Board’s structure and the regulation of dentistry and dental hygiene.
Today, Nevada’s dental regulatory framework, codified in NRS 631 and NAC 631, is built on the foundation established in 1951 and has been updated periodically over the past 70+ years to reflect changes in practice and public protection needs.
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1953: Early structural amendments to the Board / governance framework.
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1957: Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) codification adopted formally adopted and enacted the Nevada Revised Statutes in 1957, which is the codification system that houses Chapter 631 today.
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1977: Board composition / structure updated. Updated the Board’s “creation/membership” statute (NRS 631.120) during the era when the Board operated as a 10-member Governor-appointed body (before later expansion back to 11 members).
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1981: Further governance modernization. The same Board creation history reflects an 1981 amendment (“1981, 1972”), continuing structural adjustment. Further revised NRS 631.120 (Board creation/membership) as part of ongoing governance adjustments in the same period when the Board was structured as a 10-member entity.
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1983: Anesthesia/sedation permitting authority introduced (major patient-safety regulatory expansion). Nevada added the statute authorizing Board-issued permits to administer/supervise general anesthesia and sedation (originally “Added to NRS by 1983, 278”), creating a major safety and credentialing layer.
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1985: Continuing education (CE) statutory framework added. The continuing education statute shows “Added to NRS by 1985, 379”, establishing a durable CE oversight structure within NRS 631.
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1989: Sedation/anesthesia permitting framework refined. The anesthesia/sedation permitting statute shows an amendment in 1989 (“A 1989, 1740”), reflecting evolution of clinical privilege regulation.
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2001: Rural/underserved access pathway created (restricted geographical license). Nevada created a restricted geographical license pathway (“Added to NRS by 2001, 1608”) to place professionals in underserved rural areas / clinics under specified conditions.
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2001: Public health dental hygiene endorsement created. Nevada added the special endorsement allowing dental hygienists to practice public health dental hygiene under Board-set rules (“Added to NRS by 2001, 2691”).
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2003: Board structure updated again; CE statute strengthened/expanded. Board creation history shows 2003 changes (“2003, 519”). CE statute also shows a 2003 amendment (“A 2003, 2956”), signaling a major CE requirements refresh. Passed AB 489, authorizing a temporary dental hygiene license, creating the Committee on Dental Hygiene, and expanding the definition/scope of “dental hygiene.” This same period also corresponds with expanding Board membership to 11 members (i.e., adding representation compared to the prior 10-member structure).
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2005: Restricted geographical license program revised. The restricted geographical license statute shows multiple 2005 amendments (e.g., “A 2005 …”), indicating substantial tuning of the rural access licensing mechanism.
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2009: CE content requirements expanded (public safety preparedness).The CE statute shows a 2009 amendment (“2009, 301”), associated with expanded mandated training topics (the current statute includes terrorism/WMD response training concepts).
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2013: Public health dental hygiene endorsement updated.The public health dental hygiene endorsement statute shows a 2013 amendment (“A 2013, 479”), refining what endorsed hygienists can do (and under what program/rules).
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2015: Sedation/anesthesia and rural access licensing modernized again. Sedation/anesthesia permit statute shows 2015 amendment (“2015, 3876”). Restricted geographical license statute also shows a 2015 amendment (“2015, 716”).
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2019: Dental therapy profession established in NRS 631 (major new regulated profession). SB 366’s digest states the bill “establish[es] the profession and practice of dental therapy in chapter 631 of NRS” and revises NRS to account for it, with effective dates indicated in the bill materials.(Also, multiple “2019” amendments appear in core access/CE statutes, reflecting a broad modernization cycle.)
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2021: Immunization authority/endorsement introduced for dental licensees (public-health integration). AB 269’s digest describes requiring the Board to issue a special endorsement to administer immunizations for qualified dentists, dental hygienists, and dental therapists. CE statute later reflects 2021 amendments and now includes immunization-related CE requirements for certain endorsements.
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2023: Expanded Function Dental Assistants (EFDAs) licensed and regulated (major workforce model change). SB 310’s digest: “provide[s] for the licensure and regulation of expanded function dental assistants.”
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2023: Teledentistry statutory/regulatory requirements added (care-delivery modernization). Regulatory materials implementing AB 147 state that AB 147 requires Board regulations governing teledentistry and requires a bona fide relationship before providing services via teledentistry.
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2025: Licensure by endorsement rules adjusted for dental hygiene. AB 334 (effective July 1, 2025).