- Joined
- May 7, 2005
- Messages
- 19
- Reaction score
- 0
Just saw a commercial for dental exams at Sears, the retail chain trend has spread into dentistry. What profession will be next?
SoxTown said:Just saw a commercial for dental exams at Sears, the retail chain trend has spread into dentistry. What profession will be next?
RLK said:Proctology
SoxTown said:Just saw a commercial for dental exams at Sears, the retail chain trend has spread into dentistry. What profession will be next?
FREE PAP-THURSDAYS!drbizzaro said:imagine surgical procedures... "i'm just going to walmart to get a colonoscopy"
or gynecology at walmart... "two checks for the price of one!"
Ben Chudner said:It would be interesting to hear a dentist's take on this. I have a very limited knowledge of that profession, but from what I have seen (my wife consults dentists), they have been smart in how they have handled managed care. Very few dentists in my area have to take a lot of insurance. If they now have to compete with a low cost dental provider, this can be serious trouble. In our profession at least, insurance has kept patients comming into our offices. Whether or not that is really a good thing is still questionable.
aphistis said:I think "taking over" rather overstates the matter. Corporate dental offices exist, yes, but I don't expect retail chains to cut into dentistry any more than they have, for example, primary care medicine. From the retailers' perspective, pharmacy & optometry are ideally suited for their business model. A dominant fraction of the revenue they produce is generated by the sale of drugs & optical appliances, which makes them easily integrated. Dentistry & medicine, on the other hand, rely much more heavily on the services they perform, and much less on salable goods leaving the office, which I think makes them much less attractive to retail corporations. Does that mean I think dentistry is immune? No way. But I don't think what you're portraying is likely to happen anytime soon.
aphistis said:
I hope, for the sake of dentistry, you are right. Be careful, however, to not be short-sighted. We already know that Wal-Mart is moving into the eye insurance business to compete with Cole Vision (Sears, Target, LensCrafters, ect). If that works for them, and I have seen enough to know that it will, what's to stop them from offering affordable dental insurance. This is a market that seems somewhat untapped. Then, when all Wal-Mart dental insurance subscribers can only be seen in a Wal-Mart Dental office there's a ton of patients that are removed from the private practice market.aphistis said:
Ben Chudner said:I hope, for the sake of dentistry, you are right. Be careful, however, to not be short-sighted. We already know that Wal-Mart is moving into the eye insurance business to compete with Cole Vision (Sears, Target, LensCrafters, ect). If that works for them, and I have seen enough to know that it will, what's to stop them from offering affordable dental insurance. This is a market that seems somewhat untapped. Then, when all Wal-Mart dental insurance subscribers can only be seen in a Wal-Mart Dental office there's a ton of patients that are removed from the private practice market.
Maybe it's a little "the sky is falling" but I would watch this closely.