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- Pre-Dental
Do you think dentistry will ever head towards retail environments to the likes of optometrists, pharmacists, etc.?




Do you think dentistry will ever head towards retail environments to the likes of optometrists, pharmacists, etc.?
It's nice to know that, but today's market share of dental offices are:It is heading more towards that direction. Aspen Dental offices are located in retail environments. This is a direct effort to maximize access to care for patients. We place our offices in locations where the "non-compliant" patient will feel more comfortable, and we have processes in place to enable those people to afford the quality care they need.
As far as the dentists themselves, we pride ourselves on the ability to provide our dentists with offices that include the most up to date technologies, and the support to focus on patient care. Each dental office is also staffed with a Denture Lab Tech that is able to work with dentists and their patients on site.
Visit our website found in my signature, and see just how much growth Aspen is experiencing. It shows the rate of success Aspen is having, which in turn reveals the continued approval from patients and dentists alike.
It is heading more towards that direction. Aspen Dental offices are located in retail environments. This is a direct effort to maximize access to care for patients. We place our offices in locations where the "non-compliant" patient will feel more comfortable, and we have processes in place to enable those people to afford the quality care they need.
As far as the dentists themselves, we pride ourselves on the ability to provide our dentists with offices that include the most up to date technologies, and the support to focus on patient care. Each dental office is also staffed with a Denture Lab Tech that is able to work with dentists and their patients on site.
Visit our website found in my signature, and see just how much growth Aspen is experiencing. It shows the rate of success Aspen is having, which in turn reveals the continued approval from patients and dentists alike.
Actually, corporate run dental clinics are going to increase in the near future. The reason is because the offices will be run on efficiency. Most dentist's do not understand basic business principles and cannot properly run an office so they have inflated overhead. The well run corporate offices will be more efficent and decrease overhead to earn money for the shareholders. With the prices of dental school increasing every year the new grads aren't going to want to take on more loans to buy a practice (its already happening).
I do not like most corporate run offices, but I see it as an inevitable future in dentistry. We are one of the last cottage industries and I hate to say it but the days of the solo office are coming to an end.
We can debate all day about this, but reality will matter the most .... there will always be limited # of supply (dentists) that will never catch-up with the demand over the next 30 years or so.Actually, corporate run dental clinics are going to increase in the near future. The reason is because the offices will be run on efficiency. Most dentist's do not understand basic business principles and cannot properly run an office so they have inflated overhead. The well run corporate offices will be more efficent and decrease overhead to earn money for the shareholders. With the prices of dental school increasing every year the new grads aren't going to want to take on more loans to buy a practice (its already happening).
I do not like most corporate run offices, but I see it as an inevitable future in dentistry. We are one of the last cottage industries and I hate to say it but the days of the solo office are coming to an end.
It is heading more towards that direction. Aspen Dental offices are located in retail environments. This is a direct effort to maximize access to care for patients. We place our offices in locations where the "non-compliant" patient will feel more comfortable, and we have processes in place to enable those people to afford the quality care they need.
As far as the dentists themselves, we pride ourselves on the ability to provide our dentists with offices that include the most up to date technologies, and the support to focus on patient care. Each dental office is also staffed with a Denture Lab Tech that is able to work with dentists and their patients on site.
Visit our website found in my signature, and see just how much growth Aspen is experiencing. It shows the rate of success Aspen is having, which in turn reveals the continued approval from patients and dentists alike.
I think there is (and will be) rapid increase in female participation in dentistry. The estimates now are about 1/5 dentists are women, but dental enrollment trends show 1/2 are females. The will be a big segment of female dentists in the dental workforce in the future, which means the male dentists workforce is expected to decline over the next few decades (keep in mind, majority of retiring dentists are men). In addition, female dentists work fewer hours than male dentists because of family obligations and such, which will reduce the overall hours of services provided by the profession. But is this a good news for dental chains?Also we should figure something else in terms of numbers, half of the dental schools now are female. Some of these women will be part time dentists or may even take off a couple of years, so the shortage is even greater than the numbers suggest.
The count of federally designated dental health professional shortage (lack of supply) areas (HPSAs)—over 2,000 in 2002—has increased significantly in recent years. However, this change may not be indicative of the true growing need (demand) for dental providers in certain (mostly rural) communities across the country, because 1) many communities without a dentist have not applied for HPSA designation; 2) some areas that have started processes have been blocked by neighboring dentists; and 3) the way communities are designated might not reflect actual need. Everything is about supply-and-demand, as long you have a patient who needs dental service, and a dentist who can provide it.This isn't a simple supply and demand equation. It's much more complicated than that. In the short time I have been a dentist I have seen more corporate run dental offices. They are able to offer lower prices and more hours open than solo offices generally. Most industries eventually evolve and become more efficient...its just the typical business cycle. Dentistry is starting to evolve and I'm not saying it's going to happen quickly, but it is happening. If you wonder who is going to work at the offices, it's going to be the new practicioner with 300K+ in debt, the foreign grad, the ADHP, etc. I don't like it as much as the next solo practicioner but us solo's need to be smarter to compete.
I've been a dentist since 2004.
By nature of the work that we perform--which almost exclusively consists of "surgical" procedures, I don't think it will ever go the route of optometry and pharmacy, where products are sold. Besides, pharmacists, for all intents and purposes, aren't even health care providers. Their job is to oversee the dispensing of medications. Despite their efforts to increase patient contact, they have none.
I will say this, however: there are certainly dentists out there whose attitude toward their work is more suited to a retail environment. There is certainly a disturbingly high number of practices found in strip-malls rather than medical parks. Dentists who advertise smiles (which is pretty-much every dentist out there) should be working in hair salons rather than treating patients in a health care setting. One could argue that plastic surgeons and dermatologists advertise cosmetics as well, but lets be honest here: cosmetic dentistry is hardly medically-oriented work. I speak from experience. I did my share of cosmetic cases.
The manner in which dentists advertise themselves to the public as smile-fixers rather than doctors who provide oral health care is one of the main reasons I decided to leave the profession (I'm in med school now).
I agree. Solo practices usually have significantly lower overhead. Most successful private GP practices only have 2-3 employees and these employees do everything: billing, treatment plan presentation, placing orders, billing, assisting, mopping floor etc. My wife (a periodontist) and I share 2 full time employees. I also have 4 part time RDAs who only work at my office 8 days a month. Our overhead is less than 40%.Actually, corporate-run offices would be less efficient if it weren't for the fact that they push production so much.
They have more overhead. Remember, corporate offices must employ both a manager and a dentist, while dentist-owned offices only need one.
We can debate all day about this, but reality will matter the most .... there will always be limited # of supply (dentists) that will never catch-up with the demand over the next 30 years or so.
The biggest graduating dental classes were between 1975 to 1985, about 5,300 graduate students on average (as oppose to the current 4,200 new grads). Those guys have started to retire, and their effect of the supply side have already started to show in many communities all over the country. This means, for every 4,200 new grads today, there are 5,200 retiring dentists (from class of 1978). Assuming this holds true, there will a net loss of 1,000 dentists every year until it levels off (maybe by the year 2020 - at the earliest).
Meanwhile, the demand will grow even bigger during that time (because supply dropped). The U.S. population is growing faster than the dental profession. Even if 10 more schools open during that time, it will not have much effect on the equation.
The moral of the story... dental chains can set-up as many offices as they want around the country, but who will work in these offices if the supply of dentists is in red? These corporations will not be able to expand for this reason alone (maybe after this period is over, which will not be anytime soon).
Dentistry as a market is run by dentists, not by corporations.
Aspen Dental is offering FREE exam and xrays...
http://www.aspendent.com/coupons.html
Are they desperate or prudent? Do they really expect to extract any money out of people who comes in for the freebies? Maybe I should visit them sometime to see how corporate dentistry works.
Who knows what will happen in the future, especially with Obama and Democrats mandate to lessen the cost of health care.

Who knows what will happen in the future, especially with Obama and Democrats mandate to lessen the cost of health care.