Aww no one is talking!
UNCWDentist said:
I was wondering if anybody had any other thoughts on issues in todays dental community.
I know that the baby boomers who are aging are keeping their teeth longer because of improved flouride treatments so they will need more restorative care.....what type of solutions are there for this?..more training/dentists?
I don't really think this is an issue as far as we need more training. We will be trained just fine on how to do restorations. The issue here is that there will be more people who need care than we have denitsts capable of providing care. Also, a large number of baby Boomer dentists will be retiring along with the non-dentist baby boomer causing yet more need for care. Also, since when people are older, they are on fixed incomes, the cost of dental care is an issue for them, as are issues of transportation to a dental office. There have been many proposed possibilities to help this issue. One is that maybe dentists can see patients at retirement facilities themselves so that the people do not have to come out to the office. Another possibility to alleviate the lack of access was to create a new practioner type similar to a "physician assistant." who is not a fully trained dentist but can do restorations...like an advanced dental hygienist (not gonna happen as long as the ADA has any say). Cost of care won't go away as an issue unless the government steps in either to regulate dental pricing (not gonna happen if the ADA has it's say) or revamps insurances (also not going to happen)
UNCWDentist said:
Also for Northeastern Dentists (especially North Carolina)...what about Medicaid and should you accept it or not?...benefits/advantages from taking medicaid?
wow, when did north carolina become Northeastern?
In cali we have dentical, which is just as bad as medicare. Dentical kinda sucks and so does becoming an HMO office, but if no one takes HMOs then you screw over the patients who have HMOs cause that's all they got.
Disadvantages: less $ per procedure means you work longer before retirement. You could come up with the problem that patients are "less reliable" to pay their bills, but I don't know that HMO patients are worse than any other patients when it comes to paying bill...just hearsay. Also, if you don't take HMO and no one else does...you cut a whole section of the population off from dental care access and/or you force them to pay costs that they simply cannot afford to get dental care.
Advantages: well, you do get a lot of patients from HMO referrals. You'd also get that warm squishy feeling from taking HMOs when no one else does...I guess.
UNCWDentist said:
These are just a few of the ongoing issues facing todays dentists...if you know any ideas or solutions to these questions or other issues please feel free to comment
Other issues I see as being important are:
-access to care in rural areas
-more invasive dental procedures done for cosmetic purposes
-dentists who are more about the buck...i.e. recommending onlays and veneers when simple, cheaper fillings or restorations could be done.
-the growing divide between clinical and research dentistry (fewer dentists are interested in research now)
-the lack of diversity, still, in dentists accurately representing the populous (I don't particularly care...but some schools sure do)
I'm sure there is much much more...