Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian dentist works to be hygienist in U.S.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian dentist works to be hygienist in U.S.

    The Roanoke Times (Virginia)
    May 9, 2008 Friday



    Armenian dentist works to be hygienist in U.S.: Armen Grigoryan will
    graduate today from Virginia Western Community College.

    by David Harrison, The Roanoke Times, Va.



    May 9--Armen Grigoryan is looking forward to finally working on teeth
    again.

    Eight years after moving to the United States, Grigoryan, a dentist
    from Armenia, will graduate today with an associate degree in dental
    hygiene from Virginia Western Community College. He is one of 16 newly
    minted dental hygienists and one of roughly 600 students who will
    graduate from the school.

    "I've been around dentistry all my life," said Grigoryan, whose mother
    also is a dentist. "When it came time to make a decision and do
    something, I knew I was going to be a dentist."

    After getting a dentistry degree in Armenia, Grigoryan practiced for a
    few years before moving to the United States. He settled briefly in
    Los Angeles before moving to Roanoke.

    But his foreign degree and his work experience are not recognized in
    this country. If Grigoryan wanted to be a dentist here, he would have
    had to start dental school again. Instead, he worked in retail until
    enrolling in Virginia Western's dental hygiene program.

    As a dental hygienist, Grigoryan will perform duties such as teeth
    cleaning, exams and X-rays. He still can't work as a dentist but, to
    him, being a dental hygienist is good enough for now.

    "Since I was a little child, I was fascinated by all the tools and all
    that stuff," he said.

    His mother tried to dissuade him from a career in dentistry, noting
    that the job is hard on a dentist's spine and eyes, but Grigoryan
    wouldn't budge.

    Although he's already been trained as a dentist, Grigoryan still found
    the Virginia Western program "very intense." "And it should be because
    when people go to the hygienist they want to know that this person is
    trained to do it," he added.

    The program's head, Marty Roberson, described Grigoryan as an "ideal
    student," one who never trumpeted his previous dental experience.

    "He came in with a wide-open mind and said, 'I'm a sponge and I want
    to learn,' " she said.

    Part of the training involved working on patients who signed up for
    free dental cleanings and exams through the college. The students see
    their patients in an exam room in the school's Anderson Hall, where 10
    dentists' chairs are arranged in a half-circle.

    "Armen is really good at explaining things to patients in his chair,"
    she added. "He gets great compliance."

    For his part, Grigoryan said he was a little rusty after eight years
    away from teeth. But he was able to shake off the rust easily.

    "It's like riding a bicycle," he said. You don't forget.

    Now that he's done with school, Grigoryan is looking for a job as a
    dental hygienist in Roanoke. He said he wasn't sure whether he wanted
    to go back to dental school.

    Roberson, however, didn't hesitate.

    "I do hope Armen does go back and gets his dentist's license because I
    think he would be an excellent contribution to the profession."
Working...
X