Education
Alfred Fones graduated from the New York College of Dentistry in 1890.
Alfred Fones graduated from the New York College of Dentistry in 1890.
Fones created the name "dental hygienist" and in 1913 established the first school of dental hygiene. Fone"s father was also a practicing dentist, and the first "dental commissioner" for the City of Bridgeport. Newman"s training consisted in large part in learning to clean teeth under Fones" guidance.
Foreign teaching aids, Fones took the many extracted teeth from his practice, mounted them in a modeling compound and painted plaster of Paris around the neck of each tooth to represent calculus and stains.
Newman started performing oral prophylaxis for the public in 1907. (She later received the first license as a dental hygienist in Connecticut, and she became the first president of the Connecticut Dental Hygienists Association.
She died November 15, 1958 at the age of 83) Fones once said: "lieutenant is primarily to this important work of public education that the dental hygienist is called. She must regard herself as the channel through which dentistry’s knowledge of mouth hygiene is to be disseminated the greatest service she can perform is the persistent education of the public in mouth hygiene and the allied branches of general hygiene." Newman"s training seemed to help the children, so Fones launched a program to make preventive dental treatment available to schoolchildren in Bridgeport.
In 1913 he established a school for dental hygienists, convincing the Bridgeport board of education to help fund the program
Although he envisioned dental hygienists in doctors" offices, his primary goal was to have them work in schools. Fones raised a total of $46,000 to open the school, which had a first class of 34 women, many of them "mature" women who were school teachers, nurses or doctors" wives. The first classes of the "Fones Clinic Foreign Dental Hygienists" were held in a garage behind Fones" office in a carriage house at 10 Washington Avenue in Bridgeport.
Despite the humble location, the school"s faculty included the deans of the dental schools of Pennsylvania and Harvard, seven professors from Yale and two from Columbia, along with other noted practitioners from the United States and beyond.
Local dentists and professionals from Japan were among the instructors. In June 1915, a total of 27 students graduated from the first class.
Many graduates went on to jobs with the Bridgeport school district, where they played a major part in reducing dental caries in students by 75 percent. Some years later, Fones suspended operation of the school so that he could devote more time to traveling and lecturing on dental hygiene.
Eleven years after his death (on March 15, 1938), in 1949, dental professionals and the Junior College of Connecticut (of which Doctor Fones had been a trustee) reopened the The is now located at the University of Bridgeport.
As of 2007 education in the field has expanded, with more than 200 dental hygiene schools and 120,000 registered dental hygienists in the United States alone.