This is an area where we need to eliminate large corporarions from influencing medical decisions due to the legal duty of the practitioner to propose that treatment which best fits the medical risk/benefit analysis not merely what is most convienient to the practitioner or a corporation. Phrased differently, we need to foster strong laws and policy that places patient safety and outcome over all of the financial interests such that the licensing boards are efficiently and effectively monitoring and regulating practitioners appropriately and removing bad apples sooner rather than later.
I disagree. Everyone loves their own crappy dentist. Seen it hundreds of times over the past 30 years working for literally hundreds of different dentists as a temp. I can also tell you if you seek 3 different dentists, you’ll get 3 different treatment plans because they have different diagnosing capacities. Some dentists will even be afraid to tell you their entire treatment plan for you because they are afraid you’ll say “no” so they reveal it a little at a time. Any dentist reading this knows it’s true. How much horrible dental work have you seen from clueless patients who are praising their last dentist they left? It’s commonplace to see poor fitting gum disease causing crowns and bridges and patients don’t even know what a prosthodontist is. That would be my advice. Learn the dental specialities and use general dentists only for fillings. Right. They can’t stay in business then. I have sooo much more to say such as now how to find the best dental specialist. Ok. I need to write my book. I have another secret. How to Never get a cavity. I have 2 sons, one with nonverbal autism that was difficult to brush but neither have ever had any tooth decay whatsoever. I need to go write my book on all I’ve learned that can help the public. What should I call my book that you would buy it? Rhonda Maza
This is an area where we need to eliminate large corporarions from influencing medical decisions due to the legal duty of the practitioner to propose that treatment which best fits the medical risk/benefit analysis not merely what is most convienient to the practitioner or a corporation.
Phrased differently, we need to foster strong laws and policy that places patient safety and outcome over all of the financial interests such that the licensing boards are efficiently and effectively monitoring and regulating practitioners appropriately and removing bad apples sooner rather than later.
These "Doctors" are about as trustworthy with regards to medicine, as Woopy Goldberg and the women at the view are with regards to politics.
I disagree. Everyone loves their own crappy dentist. Seen it hundreds of times over the past 30 years working for literally hundreds of different dentists as a temp. I can also tell you if you seek 3 different dentists, you’ll get 3 different treatment plans because they have different diagnosing capacities. Some dentists will even be afraid to tell you their entire treatment plan for you because they are afraid you’ll say “no” so they reveal it a little at a time. Any dentist reading this knows it’s true. How much horrible dental work have you seen from clueless patients who are praising their last dentist they left? It’s commonplace to see poor fitting gum disease causing crowns and bridges and patients don’t even know what a prosthodontist is. That would be my advice. Learn the dental specialities and use general dentists only for fillings. Right. They can’t stay in business then. I have sooo much more to say such as now how to find the best dental specialist. Ok. I need to write my book. I have another secret. How to Never get a cavity. I have 2 sons, one with nonverbal autism that was difficult to brush but neither have ever had any tooth decay whatsoever. I need to go write my book on all I’ve learned that can help the public. What should I call my book that you would buy it? Rhonda Maza