While most dentists are ethical, the practice of going with more profitable procedures, materials or appliances is not new. In 2013, a Washington dentist writing in an American Dental Association publication lamented a pattern of “creative diagnosis.”
Why Your Dentist Might Seem Pushy
In 1993, Dr. David Silber, a dentist now practicing in Plano, Texas, was fired from the first dental clinic he worked for. He’d been assigned to a patient another dentist had scheduled for a crown preparation - a metal or porcelain cap for a broken or decayed tooth. However, Silber found nothing wrong with the tooth, so he sent the patient home.
He was fired later the same day. “
Never send a patient away who’s willing to pay the clinic money, he was told.
Silber said what happened to him then still happens today, that some dentists who don’t think they receive enough from insurance reimbursement - whether private insurance or Medicaid - have figured out ways to boost their bottom lines. They push products and procedures a patient doesn’t need or recommend higher-cost treatment plans when less expensive options might accomplish the same thing.
Why your dentist might seem pushy
While most dentists are ethical, the practice of going with more profitable procedures, materials or appliances is not new. In 2013, a Washington dentist writing in an American Dental Association publication lamented a pattern of “creative diagnosis.”
Written By:
Daryl Austin / Kaiser Health News | 7:55 am, May 20, 2021 × Hundreds of thousands of dental procedures are performed safely and effectively on a daily basis, says Dr. Dave Preble, senior vice president of the American Dental Association’s Practice Institute. But fraud does exist in the industry. Image from Pexels
In 1993, Dr. David Silber, a dentist now practicing in Plano, Texas, was fired from the first dental clinic he worked for. He’d been assigned to a patient another dentist had scheduled for a crown preparation a metal or porcelain cap for a broken or decayed tooth. However, Silber found nothing wrong with the tooth, so he sent the patient ho
While most dentists are ethical, the practice of going with more profitable procedures, materials or appliances is not new. In 2013, a Washington dentist writing in an American Dental Association publication lamented a pattern of “creative diagnosis.”
Why your dentist might seem pushy
While most dentists are ethical, the practice of going with more profitable procedures, materials or appliances is not new. In 2013, a Washington dentist writing in an American Dental Association publication lamented a pattern of “creative diagnosis.”
Written By:
Daryl Austin / Kaiser Health News | 7:55 am, May 20, 2021 × Hundreds of thousands of dental procedures are performed safely and effectively on a daily basis, says Dr. Dave Preble, senior vice president of the American Dental Association’s Practice Institute. But fraud does exist in the industry. Image from Pexels
In 1993, Dr. David Silber, a dentist now practicing in Plano, Texas, was fired from the first dental clinic he worked for. He’d been assigned to a patient another dentist had scheduled for a crown preparation a metal or porcelain cap for a broken or decayed tooth. However, Silber found nothing wrong with the tooth, so he sent the patient ho