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Is it difficult for Asians to be successful as dentists? Would some American (white people) despise Asians and never go to Asian dentists' offices?
Haha,, I'm pretty worried 🙂
Is it difficult for Asians to be successful as dentists? Would some American (white people) despise Asians and never go to Asian dentists' offices?
Haha,, I'm pretty worried 🙂
find any non-AsianIs it difficult for Asians to
non-Asian dentists?wwkkim said:dentists? Would some American (white people) despise

Good God...
That relieves me a lot..
I just heard my friend (Asian) telling me that white people only going for white dentists and we have no hope or sth.
Heheh,, anyways.. thanks folks!![]()
Is it difficult for Asians to be successful as dentists? Would some American (white people) despise Asians and never go to Asian dentists' offices?
Haha,, I'm pretty worried 🙂
Give me a break, anyone with intelligence will go to the best doctor that they can afford regardless of race or color. If their stupid enough to base a decision on someones color or race then trust me you don't want them.
Is it difficult for Asians to be successful as dentists? Would some American (white people) despise Asians and never go to Asian dentists' offices?
Haha,, I'm pretty worried 🙂
If anything, as an asian and possibly as an asian without English as a first language, I might worry that communication skills might hinder my ability to attract patients to me. If that's the case, you can always do what a bunch of asian dentists seem to be doing nowadays and open a dental spa with an asian sounding name like Sutra Dental Spa, FengSui Dental Spa, Chi Spirituality Dental Spa and put up some carved wood and painted paper dividers, hire a masseuse, play crappy oriental sounding music, put in a rock garden waterfall, and put paper lanterns on the walls with pictures of dragons and wind spirits and whatever. Then patients will think the accent is just part of the experience.
First of all, I'm Korean and Taiwanese, so I do understand the your opinion on the discrimination we face in this country.
However, to answer your question, it all depends on which city your practice is located in. If you open your practice in an Asian-dominated area in the US, then you're more than likely to have a decent amount of patients. Some of these places are:
* Bay Area California
* L.A. area
* San Jose
* Hawaii!!
* Seattle, WA
* Parts of Portland Oregon
* NYC
*Boston
* Chicago area
* Maryland/Virginia (fairfax) area
It also depends on which type of Asian you are. I speak Korean, so I know a lot of Korean patients will come to see me for treatment rather than seeing a white or black dentist who can't communicate with them. Same phenomenon for hispanic patients who prefer to see hispanic dentists that could speak Spanish.
Good luck with your dental endeavors!!
hah, if you're asking a question like this then most likely you will have a problem. if you're a fob or azn that's not willing to make an effort, then yes, you will struggle with attracting other patients.
you can overcome the color of your skin, but you need to not only be fluent in english but culturally fluent as well. can you talk sports, or pop culture, or be comfortable around different people?
i'm a korean-american, but i can be 100% comfortable around white, black or asian people, as long as they give me a chance. i've had the fortunate opportunity to interact with all three different groups, and i know we share a lot more in common than differences.
most importantly you have to remember it's not what makes you comfortable that matters, it's what makes the other person that you're trying to make a connection with comfortable. if you make the effort, they'll do the same.
finally i'm just tired of this whole "group identity politics" thing. it leads to the lessening of the individual 😛
Dude you are wrong. there are many successful dentists out there that don't like sports or can't talk about some crazy shows on TV. If you have a good communication skills and really care about your patients and work hard you will be successful and color of your skin will not matter.
Ok, first of all, this thread is NOT STUPID SO U WHITE PEOPLE GET OUT. it is important to know who yoir main customers are in order to make a decent living. It is true that asian dentists usually get patients of all races EXCEPT WHITES because they think only white dentists are good enough to handle with. Hispanics and blacks usually believe the asian stereotype of smartness and go to asian dentists because hispanics/blacks/asians are all minority and dont feel superior to each other like whites.
THE MOST IMPORTANT THING is that asian dentists will have a totally different customer base than white dentists. So, the list for the highest paying jobs will most probably only favor the white dentists, such as orthos or specialists making tons of money. Minority groups usually are uneducated about specialists and would not want to spend money on useless specialists, just the bare work of dentists relieving their pain. Also, minorities usually dont see doctors regularly, and their teeth conditions get terribly worse until the pain is unbearable. Then they spend thousands on root canal and such and dentists make the most money from those.
SO, it will be favorable for an asian dentist to NOT SPECIALIZE and to set up a business in an area consisting mainly of poor minorities that spend tons for root canals and crowns.
Is it difficult for Asians to be successful as dentists? Would some American (white people) despise Asians and never go to Asian dentists' offices?
Haha,, I'm pretty worried 🙂
I went to UCLA dental school to visit. I was surprised to see so many Asian faculty and students (undergrads and postgrads)!

Greetings to all,
This thread is something that I can relate to. This is a quote my my Dentistry Mentoring Thread #18:
This is a very good question as I can relate to it. When I started dental school 17 years ago, I have heard countless comments from my asian friends and family members that " Oh, you are asian, you will hard time having white patients... You better find a Vietnamese community or else you go broke.." or " People only like to go to their kind..". Well, what I found out is that was total total bunk! True, asian patients may feel more comfortable with asian dentists but that is NOT to say that asian dentists could only attract asian patients. When I had my faculty practice at the University of Tennessee at Memphis, my patients range from all races and ethenic backgrounds. What patients are looking for is somebody with reputation of doing excellent dentistry and not of skin color. When you set up a practice, find a location that allows you to be " a big fish in a little pond". If it happens to be in an asian community then be it. If not, then that's perfectly fine too. Do NOT get into the myth that "asian dentists could only attract asian patients" as I personally have dispelled that misconception. So the moral of story is race is not a factor. What factors in is what you can do for your patients. DP
In short, people choose their dentists based on reputation, cleanliness of the office, fees, doctor mannerism and most of all location. You can be the best dentist there is in your state, but if you set up your office next to Ming's Buffet or Viet Hoa Super Market, you are not going to get many white patients at all. I have seen this too often at asian districts. If you set up your office in a professional location along with other medical professionals, you WILL get patients from all walk of life even if you are asian. DP
Yes, you're right. Most asian dentists struggle hard....and only have asian visitors🙁