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so we can discuss preferences on loupes to use in our practice but not on whitening brands?
Example of acceptable:
Hey, I heard that dentists have the highest rate of suicide. Why is that??? omg are they like super depressed omg!!11!11!
That doesn't violate the forum TOS, regardless of whether or not you prefer it as a topic.
Discussing which loupes are better than others is a professional conversation that leads to improved patient care and clinical performance. That's exactly the kind of stuff SDN is for.
Asking what kind of whitening you should get, on the other hand, is soliciting advice as a patient, and as a matter of policy SDN prohibits requests for treatment advice. I hope this helps a little.
Thanks for sharing. 🙂I didn't know that discussion of crest whitestrips that can be bought OVER THE COUNTER was professional advice. The people who were discussing it in that thread were doing so as CONSUMERS, not in relation to their use and results in their patients.
Apparently, if I go to walmart and ask the 16 year-old pimple faced worker where the white strips are, he's all of a sudden dispensing professional advice when he tells me aisle 10 next to the tampax. 👍
This place is hilarious sometimes.
Discussing the best brands of loupes enhances patient care? LMAO!!!One would think that with any pair of loupes you would have improvement of care, so discussion of one particular brand versus the next does nothing but lead to advertising for outside companies.
Hypocrisy at its finest.
Thanks for sharing. 🙂
The issue is relatively simple. In both the first and also a later post made within the thread in question, the OP asked about in-office procedures as well as over-the-counter products. Discussing the merits of OTC products is no big deal; run a search and you'll find threads about flosses, Listerine, Crest Pro Health, Whitestrips, and plenty more. Requests for advice about in-office treatments, however, have never been allowed, and that's why the thread was closed.I'm a D1 student and I dont claim in anyway to know where the fine legal borders exist when it comes to what we can say or not. There may be some legal clause that SDN contributers may become a potentional victom to depending on whether they use words like "I recommend" or "I advise." But seriously, can you (moderators) find us a solution in that we can at least discuss other opinions on products. Please clarify where this "grey area" is.
thanx
Discussing which loupes are better than others is a professional conversation that leads to improved patient care and clinical performance. That's exactly the kind of stuff SDN is for.
Asking what kind of whitening you should get, on the other hand, is soliciting advice as a patient, and as a matter of policy SDN prohibits requests for treatment advice. I hope this helps a little.
I should have clarified. Consider the difference between discussing different anesthesia techniques with another dentist at a professional convention, and being hit up for free advice by a stranger at a party. The former is beneficial to you both as professionals; the latter does you no good, and in a worst-case scenario has the potential to cause you a lot of headache. This is the cyber-equivalent.Thanks for the above explanation. I now understand SDN's position regarding noting specific products; however, I am a little confused about how a discussion of "antibiotics" on the SDN's dental residency site at the same time as the whitening issue was not also "treatment advice." Both the whitening products at issue and the antibiotics can only be prescribed by licensed dentists/doctors. One was a discussion of patient sensisitivity, at the time the thead was closed, the other patient safety. Thanks in advance for your input.
I should have clarified. Consider the difference between discussing different anesthesia techniques with another dentist at a professional convention, and being hit up for free advice by a stranger at a party. The former is beneficial to you both as professionals; the latter does you no good, and in a worst-case scenario has the potential to cause you a lot of headache. This is the cyber-equivalent.
The forums are intended for intra-professional conversations and not consumer advice. Discussions between students, residents, and practicing dentists are welcome and encouraged, but for the same reasons that you wouldn't give free professional advice to a partygoer with a toothache, requests for treatment advice from prospective patients aren't permitted here. In the recently-closed whitening thread, from context it was apparent the OP was asking as a patient, not as a dental employee, and for that reason it fell under the no-treatment-advice policy.
I should have clarified. Consider the difference between discussing different anesthesia techniques with another dentist at a professional convention, and being hit up for free advice by a stranger at a party. The former is beneficial to you both as professionals; the latter does you no good, and in a worst-case scenario has the potential to cause you a lot of headache. This is the cyber-equivalent.
The forums are intended for intra-professional conversations and not consumer advice. Discussions between students, residents, and practicing dentists are welcome and encouraged, but for the same reasons that you wouldn't give free professional advice to a partygoer with a toothache, requests for treatment advice from prospective patients aren't permitted here. In the recently-closed whitening thread, from context it was apparent the OP was asking as a patient, not as a dental employee, and for that reason it fell under the no-treatment-advice policy.