17th Minish Course for Japanese Professionals Concludes Successfully... Korea-Japan Provider Exchange Held

59 Graduates Including 32 Dentists and 27 Hygienists
Graduation Ceremony Fosters Korea-Japan Networking and Exchange

Event Scene

Event Scene

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Health tech company Minish Technology announced on April 20 that it has produced 59 graduates through the 17th Minish Course Global, a program for Japanese dental professionals.


The graduating class included 32 dentists and 27 dental hygienists, totaling 59 participants. The cumulative number of graduates has reached 434. The course was held from April 16 to 18 at the Shinheung Training Center in Jung-gu, Seoul, with dental clinics based in Tokyo accounting for 70% of the attendees.


The Minish Course is an official training program required for performing treatments using the Minish dental restoration solution. The course covers both the theory and hands-on practice of Minish treatment, which is based on biomimetic principles, including prep, scanning, and bonding. For this session, a special lecture on clinical cases was added by Taito Shimazaki, Director of Ashikaga Dental Clinic, the local provider in Japan.


A key feature of this training was the introduction of joint education for dentists and dental hygienists. By having hospital-based teams learn the actual treatment processes together, the program aimed to improve efficiency in applying the training on site. Additionally, participation was limited to dental clinics with completed Minish provider contracts, refining the operational system.


The graduation ceremony was held as a networking event attended by over 100 participants, including domestic and international providers and instructors. The event provided an opportunity for Korean and Japanese medical professionals to share information and interact.


Minish Technology plans to hold another session in October for approximately 100 participants, but registration for that session has already closed. As of April, there are 106 Minish providers worldwide: 53 in Japan and 43 in Korea.


A representative from Minish Technology stated, "We believe that joint training will shorten the time required to begin local treatments," and added, "We plan to support overseas medical professionals so they can smoothly start their practices."

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