Preventive dentistry in 2026: what Canadian practices should know

May 15, 2026 | Hygiene & Preventative Care

Preventive dentistry in 2026: what Canadian practices should know

Canadian dental teams are rethinking prevention in 2026. Explore the protocols, tools, and whole-health approaches leading practices are adopting.

Prevention is the new standard

Icons2Canadian dentistry has always held prevention in high regard, but the gap between knowing prevention matters and building a clinical practice truly organized around it has been wide in many offices. In 2026, that gap is closing, and the practices that are closing it fastest are seeing measurable results in patient outcomes, recall compliance, and treatment acceptance.

Several forces are accelerating the shift. The expanded patient cohorts now accessing dental care through the Canadian Dental Care Plan (CDCP) include many individuals who have deferred care for years due to cost. They often present with higher caries burden, more advanced periodontal disease, and significant unmet preventive need. At the same time, Canadian patients across all demographics are increasingly informed and engaged in their health decisions, and they expect their dental team to meet them with personalized, evidence-based care.

Prevention is no longer a hygiene department function. It is the clinical foundation of a high-performing Canadian practice.

1. Make caries risk assessment standard practice

Caries risk assessment (CRA) is the foundation of modern preventive dentistry, yet many Canadian practices still do not apply it systematically. Without a formal risk stratification process, recall schedules default to a calendar-driven six-month standard, preventive interventions are applied uniformly rather than targeting the patients who need them most, and opportunities to intervene early, before restorative treatment becomes necessary, are missed.

The Canadian Dental Association (CDA) supports a risk-based approach to caries management, consistent with international evidence and the American Dental Association's well-established CRA framework. Risk stratification categorizes patients as low, moderate, or high risk based on clinical findings, contributing factors, and general health conditions.

What best practice looks like in 2026:

  • Conduct a formal CRA at every new patient examination and reassess annually or following significant changes in health status.
  • Use risk category to set recall frequency. Low-risk patients may be appropriate for annual preventive visits; high-risk patients likely need three- or four-month recall intervals.
  • Document CRA findings in the patient record to support clinical decision-making, coding, and patient communication.
  • Engage your hygiene team in risk conversations. Patients who understand their own caries risk are more likely to accept preventive treatment recommendations and maintain compliance with their recall schedule.

2. Remineralization protocols that work

Icons_teethThe ability to treat early carious lesions non-invasively has expanded significantly in recent years, and Canadian dental teams now have a strong toolkit of remineralization options to draw from.

Silver Diamine Fluoride (SDF) has seen meaningful growth in Canadian practice. The CDCP now includes coverage for topical application of antimicrobial and remineralization agents including SDF, making it more accessible for a broader patient population. Research published in the journal Health Promotion and Chronic Disease Prevention in Canada confirms that SDF is safe and effective in children and youth, with the CDCP covering two applications in a 12-month period. Its combined antimicrobial and remineralization properties make it particularly useful for pediatric patients, older adults with root caries, and patients in whom restorative treatment is difficult or not appropriate.

Fluoride varnish remains a cornerstone of preventive care for patients of all risk levels. For moderate- and high-risk patients, professionally applied fluoride varnish at every preventive visit, combined with a prescription-strength home fluoride regimen, provides a meaningful protective layer that cleanings alone cannot deliver.

Hydroxyapatite-based products are gaining ground in Canada as a remineralization option for patients who prefer fluoride-free alternatives or who present with early white spot lesions, including post-orthodontic cases. The evidence base for hydroxyapatite continues to develop, and it is increasingly part of the conversation in Canadian preventive protocols.

What best practice looks like in 2026:

    • Build SDF into your protocol for appropriate candidates: pediatric patients with active caries, older adults with root caries, and patients with high caries risk who are unable or unwilling to proceed with restorative treatment.
    • Apply fluoride varnish at every preventive visit for moderate- and high-risk patients, not only pediatric cases.
    • Discuss remineralization with patients as an alternative to immediate restorative intervention where clinically appropriate. Framing early treatment as a way to avoid a filling is one of the most effective case acceptance conversations available.

3. Oral health is whole health

Canadian dental professionals are well aware of the evidence linking oral health to systemic disease. The associations between periodontal disease and cardiovascular disease, diabetes, adverse pregnancy outcomes, and respiratory conditions are supported by a substantial and growing body of peer-reviewed research. But awareness and clinical integration are not the same thing.

In 2026, leading Canadian practices are formalizing the oral-systemic connection in their patient care protocols. This means going beyond a brief mention in patient education to actually structuring intake, clinical assessment, and team communication around systemic health factors.

What best practice looks like in 2026:

    • Update medical history intake forms to capture systemic conditions with oral health implications: diabetes, cardiovascular disease, osteoporosis, autoimmune conditions, and medications that affect salivary flow or soft tissue health.
    • Consider blood pressure monitoring at dental appointments for appropriate patients. This is an area where Canadian dental professionals, including registered dental hygienists operating under expanded scope in several provinces, are increasingly playing a role.
    • Develop co-management pathways with family physicians and specialists in your community. Provincial regulatory colleges in Ontario, British Columbia, Alberta, and beyond have published guidance on interprofessional collaboration that supports this direction.
    • Train your team to communicate the oral-systemic connection consistently in patient-facing language. Patients who understand that their gum health affects their heart health are more engaged in preventive care.

4. Rethink your recall schedule

The six-month recall schedule is a convention, not a clinical standard. In the current environment, where chair time is at a premium and patient volume is growing, the idea that every patient should be seen on the same calendar schedule regardless of their individual risk profile is difficult to justify clinically or operationally.

Risk-based recall means scheduling patients based on their actual caries and periodontal risk, supported by CRA findings. High-risk patients are seen more frequently; low-risk patients may not require a six-month interval. This approach improves clinical outcomes, optimizes scheduling efficiency, and builds patient trust by demonstrating that your recommendations are grounded in their individual health needs.

What best practice looks like in 2026:

    • Tie recall frequency directly to CRA outcomes and document the clinical rationale in the patient record.
    • Use your practice management software to flag patients whose risk profile has changed since their last visit, so your team can adjust scheduling proactively.
    • Communicate recall decisions to patients in plain language. "Based on your current risk level, we recommend seeing you every four months" is a more credible recommendation than a routine postcard.

5. Prevention as a practice strategy

A strong preventive protocol does more than improve clinical outcomes. It builds the kind of patient trust that drives treatment acceptance, recall compliance, and long-term retention.

Patients who understand their own risk, who can see the evidence of early disease in their own records, and who have been educated about the long-term costs of inaction are significantly more likely to accept comprehensive treatment recommendations. The shift from reactive care to preventive, whole-health dentistry is accelerating across Canada, and practices framing treatment through this lens are building deeper, more durable patient relationships.

What best practice looks like in 2026:

    • Use intraoral cameras, radiographs, and diagnostic imaging to show patients the evidence of their oral health status. Visual evidence is far more persuasive than clinical explanation alone.
    • Frame preventive recommendations in terms of patient outcomes: "This treatment can help us avoid a more significant procedure down the road" is a more compelling conversation than a technical description of demineralization.
    • Invest in patient education resources that reinforce the prevention message between appointments, including printed materials, digital resources, and consistent team scripting.

The prevention-first advantage

The Canadian dental practices that will lead over the next decade are not those that simply perform the most procedures. They are the practices that earn lasting patient trust, deliver consistent evidence-based outcomes, and build a clinical culture where prevention is valued at every level of the team.

That requires ongoing investment in training, protocol updates, and honest patient communication. It also requires having the right products on hand to deliver on your preventive commitments.

Frontier Dental Supply supports Canadian dental practices with a comprehensive range of preventive products. Explore our full catalogue of over 40,000 products from over 100 trusted brands at frontierdental.com, with free shipping on every order, no minimum required.

Written By: Tiffinie