J. Haentges, D.D.S. v. State Board of Dentistry

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 21, 2023
Docket348 C.D. 2022
StatusPublished

This text of J. Haentges, D.D.S. v. State Board of Dentistry (J. Haentges, D.D.S. v. State Board of Dentistry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. Haentges, D.D.S. v. State Board of Dentistry, (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Joshua Haentges, D.D.S., : Petitioner : : v. : No. 348 C.D. 2022 : Argued: September 13, 2023 State Board of Dentistry, : Respondent :

BEFORE: HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, President Judge HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge HONORABLE STACY WALLACE, Judge

OPINION BY JUDGE WALLACE FILED: December 21, 2023

Joshua Haentges, D.D.S. (Dr. Haentges) petitions for review of the March 16, 2022 order of the State Board of Dentistry (Board), denying his application for dental licensure by endorsement under 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a). Dr. Haentges challenges the Board’s determination that the licensing requirements of New York State, where he obtained a license and currently practices dentistry, were not substantially equivalent to the licensing requirements of Pennsylvania. After careful review, we reverse and remand. I. Background Dr. Haentges attended the University at Buffalo School of Dental Medicine, graduating in 2016. Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 114a, 232a. He obtained his New York dental license in 2017 and has been licensed continuously since that time. Id. at 71a, 105a. According to Dr. Haentges, he began practicing general dentistry in Addison, New York in 2017. Id. at 147a, 248a. He practiced in Addison until a brief period of unemployment in 2020 and now operates his own practice in Watkins Glen, New York. Id. at 147a-48a, 248a. Dr. Haentges explains he purchased his practice from a retiring dentist. Id. at 149a. The retiring dentist owned two offices, one in Watkins Glen and another in Elkland, Pennsylvania, and agreed to sell on the condition that Dr. Haentges purchase both of them. Id. at 149a-150a. Dr. Haentges now operates his dental practice in Watkins Glen but also owns the second Elkland office where he is unable to practice because he lacks a Pennsylvania dental license. Id. at 151a. He filed an application for licensure by endorsement in Pennsylvania on May 4, 2021. Id. at 227a-29a. By way of background, Section 3111(a) provides for licensure of certain out- of-state professionals. It provides that a licensing board “shall issue” a license if, among other things, the applicant “[h]olds a current license . . . from another state, territory or country and the licensing board or licensing commission determines that state’s, territory’s or country’s requirements are substantially equivalent to or exceed the requirements established in this Commonwealth.” 63 Pa.C.S. § 3111(a)(1). By letter dated July 27, 2021, the Board denied Dr. Haentges’ application for licensure. The Board found New York’s dental licensing requirements were not substantially equivalent to Pennsylvania’s requirements because New York did not require dental

2 applicants to pass a clinical examination. R.R. at 394a-95a. It described a clinical examination as “integral” to the licensure process in Pennsylvania. Id. at 394a. Dr. Haentges filed a written request appealing the Board’s determination. He contended that, although New York did not require its applicants to pass a dental clinical examination, it did require the successful completion of “a clinically-based postdoctoral general practice or specialty dental residency program, of at least one year’s duration” as well as a “formal outcome assessment evaluation of the resident’s competence to practice dentistry.” R.R. at 391a (quoting N.Y. Educ. Law § 6604(3) (McKinney 2007)).1 He maintained New York’s residency requirement was “at least ‘substantially equivalent’” to a clinical examination. Id. The Board delegated the matter to a hearing examiner, who held a hearing on October 4, 2021. Dr. Haentges participated in the hearing with counsel and was the sole witness to testify.2 Primarily, Dr. Haentges testified regarding the value of New York’s residency requirement based on his experiences and regarding the difficulty he would face if he attempted to complete a dental clinical examination. Dr. Haentges testified he completed a dental residency at the Stratton Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Albany, New York. R.R. at 120a. He testified New York law requires residents to perform a specific list of procedures, including “two full crowns; two endodontically treated teeth; four restorations, meaning two anterior, two posterior; and one periodontal case.” Id. at 117a. Dr. Haentges contrasted these minimum requirements with the procedures he actually performed during residency,

1 New York’s legislature amended Section 6604(3), effective November 21, 2022. The current version eliminates the words “clinically-based” but is otherwise the same.

2 Counsel for the Commonwealth also participated in the hearing but did not take a position and expressed his intent to defer to the hearing examiner and the Board. R.R. at 103a.

3 which included 21 crown preparations, 14 endodontic procedures, 197 restorations, and 18 periodontal cases. Id. at 135a-42a, 382a. Further, Dr. Haentges contrasted his experiences as a dental resident with the American Board of Dental Examiners (ADEX) examination, a clinical examination accepted in Pennsylvania. R.R. at 123a-31a, 382a. Dr. Haentges testified the ADEX examination involves only three crown preparations, two restorations, one complete root canal, and one partial root canal. Id. In addition, he emphasized his residency was one year long, while the ADEX examination is only two to three days long. Id. at 115a, 145a. Dr. Haentges insisted that attempting to take the ADEX examination now would be an arduous process, which might require him to locate live patients and transport them to the examination site.3 Id. at 109a-11a. Moreover, he testified many ADEX examinations are open to dental students but not current dentists.4 Id. at 112a. Dr. Haentges testified he searched for open ADEX examinations the night before the hearing and found that only 11 of the 60 or 65 available examinations were allowing individuals other than dental students to participate. Id. at 168a-69a. He added: “for the rest of this year there is only maybe one or two that are open – not open, but have a wait list and are open to outside candidates.” Id. at 169a-70a. Despite Dr. Haentges’ concern that it would be difficult to find and transport live patients, he acknowledged the ADEX examination does not always require performing procedures on live patients. R.R. at 145a-46a. Dr. Haentges explained

3 Dr. Haentges explained performing the ADEX examination on a live patient required the patient to have a “perfect” dental lesion and a certain health history. R.R. at 109a. He testified: “It has to be this type of lesion, this far in. . . . They have to have a certain blood pressure. They have to . . . have a certain medical history behind them. It’s very, very stringent as far as getting patients.” Id.

4 He blamed the COVID-19 pandemic for this situation, explaining: “they used to offer multiple exams throughout the year, and I believe that the pandemic has changed that. There’s not as many patients coming into the dental schools for treatment.” R.R. at 112a.

4 applicants perform the crown preparation and root canal portions of the ADEX examination “on manikins,” which means “[t]here’s no cheek. There’s no patient moving around. There’s no coughing or tongue. . . . Which is a big deal in dentistry. . . . there’s no patient that needs to be numb.” Id. at 145a. He explained many ADEX examinations did not require live patients at all but were instead performed entirely using “plastic teeth . . . on a manikin.”5, 6 Id. at 170a. On December 20, 2021, the astute hearing examiner, Michael T.

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Bluebook (online)
J. Haentges, D.D.S. v. State Board of Dentistry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-haentges-dds-v-state-board-of-dentistry-pacommwct-2023.