Kelly Hall, RDH, OMT, airway health advocate jpg

Kelly Hall, RDH
Orofacial Myologist

Read my latest article in the September 2020 Issue of ‘Oh Canada!’ - Oral Health Canada! Magazine’

“Healthy Kids Need Healthy Airways”

Co-Authored with Kim Kung, RDH, OMT

About Me

Hi I’m Kelly

I am a Dental Hygienist and Orofacial Myologist with an extensive background in the field of dentistry. I am the owner of Back To Your Roots: Centre for Orofacial Myology and provide exclusive Orofacial Myofunctional Therapy services for all ages.

My journey into the field of Orofacial Myology began when I became passionate about the strong connection between oral health and the body.  I became increasingly interested in health and wellness, as I wanted to understand not only the “root cause” of orofacial concerns, but overall health.

This is where the name of my company was inspired from: “Back to Your Roots”. My interest developed into a passion that drove me to look further into how the airway, craniofacial development, jaw, breathing, and tongue are all linked to our overall health, sleep, and well being.

I am an airway focused health advocate, educator and mentor in the field of Orofacial Myology that embraces airway health and whole body wellness. At Back To Your Roots; centre for orofacial myolody we provide a fun, caring, interactive program to instil healthy habits to breathe well, sleep well and live well.

As a result of my inspiration to spread awareness in the field of Orofacial Myology my “Mentoring” and “Resources” page was created. My goal is to share and educate other professionals on the core symptoms of Orofacial Myofunctional Disorders and the benefits of Myofunctional Therapy.

I work along side a network of specialists and have built a powerful, highly educated network of dentists, orthodontists, doctors, and healthcare providers who now have a broad knowledge of Orofacial Myology.

Together, we can make a difference in the field of Orofacial Myology

*Proud member of the CDHA and the CDHO

“I provide training for the orofacial muscles in
the mouth, face, lips, and tongue to help with breathing, chewing, swallowing, speech, orthodontic concerns/relapse and jaw pain”