Wider Healthcare Roles

Wider Healthcare Roles addresses I 2.3. For dental nurses this means recognising connections with GPs, pharmacists, safeguarding leads, care homes, interpreters and emergency services.
Team working is a professional safety system: know roles, respect scope, communicate clearly and protect people who raise concerns.
In practice this appears in everyday moments: a patient who looks uncertain, a receptionist seeking guidance, a dentist working quickly, a trainee needing feedback, a digital message, a handover, or a colleague worried about raising a concern. Interpersonal skill is responding with care, clarity and professional judgement.
Practical markers
- Notice: what the patient, colleague, situation or system is communicating.
- Choose: a communication method, team route or escalation step that fits the context.
- Respect: role boundaries, confidentiality, dignity, cultural needs and emotional impact.
- Check: understanding, responsibility, handover and whether the next person has the information they need.
- Follow up: through records, feedback, supervision, team discussion or concern-raising where needed.
Useful language can be simple: "Can we pause and check whose role this is, so the patient gets the right support?" The wording is calm and professional and gives the team a clear reason to pause, clarify or escalate.
Roles of dental and other healthcare professionals in learning and working within dental and wider healthcare teams helps dental nurses protect patient dignity, team trust and safe care.

