Figure 4: It is well known that up to 50% of the adult population snores. Get involved with sleep medicine. Much of the clinical responsibility can be delegated to staff, and the desire for this service is enormous. |
• Tooth whitening-This is nothing new to you. However, I feel that many dentists do not emphasize this concept to their patients. If every adult patient was educated about tooth whitening, a high percentage of patients would accept the procedure. Whitening is the entry to many other esthetic procedures.
The majority of the clinical time to accomplish these oral procedures may be done by staff persons under the supervision of a dentist. I have no reservation in stating that full incorporation of the procedures noted here will increase both your patient services and practice revenue.
Complete coding
Procedure codes change often. I commonly see dentists who are not aware of the many changes that occur in codes. As a result, they don't notify benefit companies about the procedures they've accomplished, and the payments to them do not represent what they've legitimately done.
Business staff should carefully review the ADA codebook as each new edition is published. Also, business staff should take continuing education courses from a practice management educator to ensure they're coding properly and completely.
Enhance dental assistant skills
Dental assistants can be reactive or proactive with their skills. If they merely accomplish the well-recognized and routine dental assisting tasks, they fulfill a significant role in your office, but there's much more they can do with their skills.
The proactive dental assistant has her or his mind several steps ahead of the procedure the dentist is currently doing. As a result of the assistant's thought and preparation, procedures flow rapidly and time is saved. A so-called "roving" assistant, who helps when and wherever needed, can also assist a proactive dental assistant. If your dental assistants are not proactive, there are good CE courses to educate them about this concept. A video on this subject is noted at the end of this article.
Expand the procedures that you, the dentist, accomplish
Several procedures are not in the treatment repertoire of most dentists. A few are:
• All aspects of occlusion including treating bruxism, TMD, and other occlusal maladies.
• Sleep medicine is increasing rapidly, and educated dentists can be a major part of the team of board-certified sleep physicians, sleep technicians, dental technologists, and dentists.
• Sports dentistry is necessary in all geographic areas, but few dentists become involved. Accidents involving orofacial structures occur frequently, necessitating the expertise of dentists.
• Implant placement is slowly growing among general dentists in the U.S. It is already a commonly accomplished procedure for general dentists in most developed countries. Go for it!
Involving yourself with these activities is exciting and invigorating for you, serves patients well, and produces more revenue.
Summary
I empathize with you regarding your difficulty making enough revenue to satisfy the necessities of life when recognizing the third-party provider limitations you described. We must be creative in developing ways to overcome the challenge by delegating more responsibilities to staff, enhancing the abilities of staff, coding properly, and expanding the variety of services we provide.
Gordon J. Christensen, DDS, MSD, PhD, is a practicing prosthodontist in Provo, Utah. He is the founder and director of Practical Clinical Courses, an international continuing-education organization initiated in 1981 for dental professionals. Dr. Christensen is a cofounder (with his wife, Dr. Rella Christensen) and CEO of Clinicians Report (formerly Clinical Research Associates).