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Florida Statute 466.003 - Full Text and Legal Analysis
Florida Statute 466.003 | Lawyer Caselaw & Research
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The 2025 Florida Statutes

Title XXXII
REGULATION OF PROFESSIONS AND OCCUPATIONS
Chapter 466
DENTISTRY, DENTAL HYGIENE, AND DENTAL LABORATORIES
View Entire Chapter
466.003 Definitions.As used in this chapter:
(1) “Board” means the Board of Dentistry.
(2) “Dentist” means a person licensed to practice dentistry pursuant to this chapter.
(3) “Dentistry” means the healing art which is concerned with the examination, diagnosis, treatment planning, and care of conditions within the human oral cavity and its adjacent tissues and structures. It includes the performance or attempted performance of any dental operation, or oral or oral-maxillofacial surgery and any procedures adjunct thereto, including physical evaluation directly related to such operation or surgery pursuant to hospital rules and regulations. It also includes dental service of any kind gratuitously or for any remuneration paid, or to be paid, directly or indirectly, to any person or agency. The term “dentistry” shall also include the following:
(a) The taking of an impression of the human tooth, teeth, or jaws directly or indirectly and by any means or method.
(b) Supplying artificial substitutes for the natural teeth or furnishing, supplying, constructing, reproducing, or repairing any prosthetic denture, bridge, appliance, or any other structure designed to be worn in the human mouth except on the written work order of a duly licensed dentist.
(c) The placing of an appliance or structure in the human mouth or the adjusting or attempting to adjust the same.
(d) Delivering the same to any person other than the dentist upon whose work order the work was performed.
(e) Professing to the public by any method to furnish, supply, construct, reproduce, or repair any prosthetic denture, bridge, appliance, or other structure designed to be worn in the human mouth.
(f) Diagnosing, prescribing, or treating or professing to diagnose, prescribe, or treat disease, pain, deformity, deficiency, injury, or physical condition of the human teeth or jaws or oral-maxillofacial region.
(g) Extracting or attempting to extract human teeth.
(h) Correcting or attempting to correct malformations of teeth or of jaws.
(i) Repairing or attempting to repair cavities in the human teeth.
(4) “Dental hygiene” means the rendering of educational, preventive, and therapeutic dental services pursuant to ss. 466.023 and 466.024 and any related extra-oral procedure required in the performance of such services.
(5) “Dental hygienist” means a person licensed to practice dental hygiene pursuant to this chapter.
(6) “Dental assistant” means a person, other than a dental hygienist, who, under the supervision and authorization of a dentist, provides dental care services directly to a patient. This term shall not include a certified registered nurse anesthetist licensed under part I of chapter 464.
(7) “Department” means the Department of Health.
(8) “Digital scanning” means the use of digital technology that creates a computer-generated replica of the hard and soft tissue of the oral cavity using enhanced digital photography, lasers, or other optical scanning devices.
(9) “Direct supervision” means supervision whereby a dentist diagnoses the condition to be treated, a dentist authorizes the procedure to be performed, a dentist remains on the premises while the procedures are performed, and a dentist approves the work performed before dismissal of the patient.
(10) “Indirect supervision” means supervision whereby a dentist authorizes the procedure and a dentist is on the premises while the procedures are performed.
(11) “General supervision” means supervision whereby a dentist authorizes the procedures which are being carried out but need not be present when the authorized procedures are being performed. The authorized procedures may also be performed at a place other than the dentist’s usual place of practice. The issuance of a written work authorization to a commercial dental laboratory by a dentist does not constitute general supervision.
(12) “Irremediable tasks” are those intraoral treatment tasks which, when performed, are irreversible and create unalterable changes within the oral cavity or the contiguous structures or which cause an increased risk to the patient. The administration of anesthetics other than topical anesthesia is considered to be an “irremediable task” for purposes of this chapter.
(13) “Remediable tasks” are those intraoral treatment tasks which are reversible and do not create unalterable changes within the oral cavity or the contiguous structures and which do not cause an increased risk to the patient.
(14) “Oral and maxillofacial surgery” means the specialty of dentistry involving diagnosis, surgery, and adjunctive treatment of diseases, injuries, and defects involving the functional and esthetic aspects of the hard and soft tissues of the oral and maxillofacial regions. This term may not be construed to apply to any individual exempt under s. 466.002(1).
(15) “Health access setting” means a program or an institution of the Department of Children and Families, the Department of Health, the Department of Juvenile Justice, a nonprofit community health center, a Head Start center, a federally qualified health center or look-alike as defined by federal law, a school-based prevention program, a clinic operated by an accredited college of dentistry, or an accredited dental hygiene program in this state if such community service program or institution immediately reports to the Board of Dentistry all violations of s. 466.027, s. 466.028, or other practice act or standard of care violations related to the actions or inactions of a dentist, dental hygienist, or dental assistant engaged in the delivery of dental care in such setting.
(16) “School-based prevention program” means preventive oral health services offered at a school by one of the entities defined in subsection (15) or by a nonprofit organization that is exempt from federal income taxation under s. 501(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, and described in s. 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code.
History.ss. 1, 3, ch. 79-330; ss. 2, 3, ch. 81-318; ss. 3, 23, 24, ch. 86-291; s. 60, ch. 91-137; s. 7, ch. 91-156; s. 4, ch. 91-429; s. 1, ch. 94-104; s. 126, ch. 94-218; s. 2, ch. 97-67; s. 107, ch. 97-264; s. 130, ch. 2000-318; s. 1, ch. 2008-64; s. 4, ch. 2011-95; s. 270, ch. 2014-19; s. 1, ch. 2024-214.

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Amendments to 466.003


Annotations, Discussions, Cases:

Cases Citing Statute 466.003

Total Results: 6  |  Sort by: Relevance  |  Newest First

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Mobley v. Gilbert E. Hirschberg, Pa, 915 So. 2d 217 (Fla. 4th DCA 2005).

Cited 18 times | Published | Florida 4th District Court of Appeal | 2005 Fla. App. LEXIS 17250, 2005 WL 2861577

...er" within the meaning of section 766.202(4), Florida Statutes (2004). A "dental assistant" is "a person, other than a dental hygienist, who, under the supervision and authorization of a dentist, provides dental care services directly to a patient." § 466.003(6), Fla....
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MacDonald v. McIver, 514 So. 2d 1151 (Fla. 2d DCA 1987).

Cited 7 times | Published | Florida 2nd District Court of Appeal | 12 Fla. L. Weekly 2553

...ewed as something of a last resort. MacDonald argues that the act applies to dental malpractice because "medical malpractice" is defined in section 768.57(1)(a) as "a claim arising out of ... medical care or services." The definition of dentistry in section 466.003, Florida Statutes (1987), recognizes the medical nature of dentistry, while the definition of "medical malpractice" found in the statute of limitations, section 95.11(4)(b), specifically includes dental care....
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Florida Ass'n of Nurse Anesthetists v. DEPT. OF PROF. REG., 500 So. 2d 324 (Fla. 1st DCA 1986).

Cited 7 times | Published | Florida 1st District Court of Appeal

...r sedation on an outpatient basis may permissibly supervise a nurse anesthetist. Appellee also held that chapter 466, the Dental Practice Act, requires that the dentist's supervision of the nurse anesthetist must be direct as that term is defined in section 466.003(8), Florida Statutes (1985)....
...istration of anesthesia to supervise directly a nurse anesthetist merely by his presence alone is unreasonable. [3] Since they relate to similar subject matter, those sections must be read in pari materia with sections 466.017(3)(c), 466.002(2), and 466.003(8)....
...Indeed, by their own terms, sections 464.003(3)(c) and 464.012(4)(a) mandate the observation of the dental profession's established protocol. Appellant's reliance on the exemption provision of section 466.002(2) is as equally unfounded and ignores the definition of "direct supervision" in section 466.003(8)....
...ge the proposed rules controls and renders moot any question of the rule's validity. We affirm the final order of the hearing officer in Case No. BM-164 denying appellant's challenge to the rules. AFFIRMED. SMITH and THOMPSON, JJ., concur. NOTES [1] Section 466.003(8) states: "Direct supervision" means supervision whereby a dentist diagnoses the condition to be treated, a dentist authorizes the procedure to be performed, a dentist remains on the premises while the procedures are performed, and a dentist approves the work performed before dismissal of the patient....
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Mitchell v. Gillespie, 164 So. 2d 867 (Fla. 1st DCA 1964).

Cited 5 times | Published | Florida 1st District Court of Appeal

[1] F.S. Section 466.04, F.S.A. [2] F.S. Section 466.03, F.S.A. [3] Peters v. Brown et al., (Fla.
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Glenn v. State ex rel. Dep't of Prof'l Reg., 495 So. 2d 844 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1986).

Published | District Court of Appeal of Florida | 11 Fla. L. Weekly 2120, 1986 Fla. App. LEXIS 10037

in the practice of dentistry, as defined in Section 466.-03(3), Florida Statutes (1983), during the since-concluded
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Spiro v. Highlands Gen. Hosp., 489 So. 2d 802 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1986).

Published | District Court of Appeal of Florida | 11 Fla. L. Weekly 1195, 1986 Fla. App. LEXIS 7963

...It is the legislative intent that physicians who fall below minimum competency or who otherwise present a danger to the public shall be prohibited from practicing in this state. It is evident that the anesthesiology desired to be practiced by the appellant is nondental in nature. Section 466.003(3), Florida Statutes (1985), explicitly limits the practice of dentistry to “the healing art which is concerned with ......
...the human oral cavity and its adjacent tissues and structures. When read in context, it is clear that section 466.017 merely relates to the nature of anesthetic agents a dentist may administer in the course of his dental practice. Thus, in light of section 466.003(3), the use of anesthesia by a dentist is necessarily limited to the practice of dentistry....

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