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These identical twins can both be your dentist

February 8, 2019 By DentalBuzz Staff 6 Comments

 

The novelty of seeing someone’s face repeated on another human creates a positive moment of surprise that will be instantly apparent on your own face. Do you feel genuine happiness when you encounter the miracle of identical twins? Well, maybe there’s a dental practice in your area that will engage that joy, one that will take care of that big broad smile that they bring out of you every time you visit.

Duplicate Dentistry is what you’ll get with twins! At least that’s the general idea. Two individuals who chose the same path in life, right down to their profession and where they would live. It makes sense, though, that twins would find a sense of trust and companionship with one another enough to form a complimentary way to be in the world.

It’s pretty common for spouses to meet in college and then to build dental practices together, or for children to follow their parents’ leads and then join them as dentists in the towns where they were raised. Identical twin dentists practicing together is quite exceptional, and rare, which is a little surprising! As an identical twin,  it makes sense to weigh your natural clone’s career ideas along with those that you are considering. Then again, it’s a lot to ask someone to join you for eight years of college and then open up a business with you.

That’s exactly what these wonderful people have done, though. They are identical twins who work together to make dentistry a more enjoyable part of their patients’ lives. Keep reading to see if there are a set of twin dentists or orthodontists that are close enough for you to visit.

 

 Charlotte, North Carolina

 

 

Drs. Lindsey Rennick Salone and Lauren Rennick Lockhart

 

Courtesy of Charlotte Today

Dual Image Smiles

One of the taglines for this practice is “Laugh Frequently. Smile Proudly.” Dr. Salone, Dr. Lockhart, and the other doctor Lockhart (Lauren’s husband) have been providing family dental care and orthodontics in the Charlotte area with the high level of expertise that comes with the rigorous years of additional training they have all received in their professions. The twins were featured recently on a local morning show where they shared why their practice is a great dental home for all members of the family, from toddlers to grandparents. On their website, Dr. Lauren gives us a taste of what it’s like to be her patient. She states, “I love to laugh, I love to smile, and am excited to share these gifts with you!” If you’re lucky enough to live in the Charlotte, NC area, visit them in their office (a renovated house!) or schedule an appointment with them at DualImageSmiles.com.

1315 Matheson Ave, Charlotte, NC 28205  Phone: (704) 334-6907

 

 

 Midland, Michigan

 

 

 

Drs. John McLaren and Charles McLaren

 

McLaren Dental Associates

Some sets of identical twins can be harder to track down than others! Especially when they’re very humble about themselves. You would think that McLaren Dental would make it well-known that twin dentists would be caring for you! If it weren’t for this article written 15 years ago when the two took over an existing practice in Midland they may not have ever been included here. In the article’s interview, Charles echoes the feelings that many twins have about their lives together.  “I have yet to meet any brothers or sisters that are closer than us. That’s the way we grew up,” Charles said. “A lot of our decisions in life were at least in part based on what the other was doing. We’ve both had the same interests and skills. I’ve called him up before, and thought I was talking to myself.” They can be found at McLarenDental.com.

308 Northgate Drive,  Midland, MI 48640   Phone: (989) 631-7880

 

 

Frisco, Texas

 

 

 

Drs. Pantea Nooraee and Kelara Gandy

 

Twins Family Dentistry

This is the first of THREE (!) sets of identical dental twins in Texas, located in the far north Dallas area of the state. If you don’t see them both on the same day, however, that’s because they now work from two locations in Frisco to make it even more convenient for their patients.  What’s it like to visit them? Here’s one reviewer’s take:  “Dr. Nooraee and Dr. Gandy are the pinnacle of dentistry, the office has state of the art technology, SUPER sweet staff and convenience is their specialty. (I don’t know who my dentist is as they really are twins) I think I like them both though.” You can request an appointment and more from their website at TwinsFamilyDentistry.com.

8811 Teel Pkwy Suite 270, Frisco, TX 75034   Phone: (972) 335-3000

2626 Stonebrook Pkwy Suite 400, Frisco, TX 75034   Phone: (214) 872-2200

 

 

Austin, Texas

 

 

 

Drs. Kip Nielson and Cody Nielson

   

Starlight Dental and Orthodontics

Need a dentist (or two) that are fluent Spanish speakers and live in central Texas? It would be surprising to learn that the twins are both undergraduate Spanish majors, until you realized that their education was a continuation of the experience gained as each served as missionaries in Central America for two years. Dr. Kip’s time was spent in El Salvador, while Dr. Cody worked in Costa Rica. They both value building long-term relationships with their patients and providing a level of dental care that will endure as well. Dr. Kip shares his feelings about his work in this way: “l feel extremely blessed and fortunate to provide healthy and beautiful smiles to all those that l treat. I am thankful for the opportunity l have as a dentist to meet and serve so many wonderful people in the Austin area.”  You can read more about them at StarLightDentalAustin.com.

10123 Lake Creek Pkwy #2, Austin, TX 78729  Phone: (512) 250-8101

 

 

Amarillo, Texas

 

 

 

Drs. Austin Hodges and Patrick Hodges

Hodges and Hodges Orthodontics

Austin Hodges and Patrick Hodges are identical twin dentists with additional specialty training as orthodontists. Which means that while you won’t be able to visit them for your regular dental care, they can make sure that you and your family’s teeth are in the best possible position to enhance your smile. Their childhood orthodontist in Amarillo hired them once they both graduated from Texas A&M University, and after his retirement, they moved to a new office built on the family land that is shared by their dad’s veterinary practice. Dr. Austin and Dr. Patrick were drawn to dentistry as their profession after participating in mission trips to Mexico with local dentists and experiencing profound gratitude from the people they served during those visits. Why did they choose to practice together? In this recent Amarillo Globe-News interview, Patrick addressed the question. “It’s never been a plan that was set in stone, but we always thought it would be nice to work together. We were roommates for almost 30 years, so we figured we’d be pretty good (business) partners.” They now have three locations where Texas panhandle residents can get their teeth straightened. To view a tour of their offices, visit HodgesAndHodgesOrtho.com.

5212 S Coulter St, Amarillo, TX 79119    Phone: (806) 353-9862

1801 4th Ave, Canyon, TX 79015    Phone: (806) 353-9863

1401 E. 1st St, Dumas, TX 79029   Phone: (806) 353-4442

 

 

 Tuscaloosa, Alabama

 

 

 

Drs. Belinda Rhodes and Melinda Rhodes

Rhodes & Rhodes Family Dentistry

Meet BeBe and MeMe, the Rhodes twins who grew up in Sawyerville, Alabama. They’ve been practicing together in Tuscaloosa since 2013 and work with a loving group of dental staffers that know how to put patients first. Although they still practice under their original last name, both dentists are married, and enjoy spending their time serving their communities. After obtaining undergraduate degrees at Stillman College in Tuscaloosa, Belinda and Melinda earned their DDS degrees from The University of Michigan School of Dentistry. Learn more about the Rhodes and the rest of their team at RhodesFamilyDental.com.

6000 Old Greensboro Rd, Tuscaloosa, AL 35405    Phone: (205) 409-9088

 

 

Cincinnati, Ohio

 

 

 

Drs. Dave Rothan and Mike Rothan

Twin Dental

The Rothan brothers may not be exact duplicates of one another, but as twins that have practiced together for over 30 years, they deserve a place in this lineup. They are known for their ability to provide a wide range of dental services so that patients can have both general care and specialty care provided in the same office without needing referrals to other dentists. You’ll find that everyone in the practice is down-to-earth yet professional, and that they have the experience and technology needed to make dentistry less scary. Most importantly, Dr. Dave and Dr. Mike focus on prevention so that their patients are less likely to need more complex care in the first place! You can schedule a free virtual consultation online at TwinDental.com.

11430 Hamilton Ave Suite 1002, Cincinnati, OH 45231   Phone: (513) 825-6111

 

 

Monroe, Louisiana and Baton Rouge, Louisiana

 

 

 

Drs. Katina Beverly and Kredenna Beverly

TWINkling Smiles of Monroe

TWINkling Smiles of Baton Rouge

 How do you know that your dentist has the right focus to take care of children? When that dentist originally wanted to be a kindergarten teacher. Both Katina and Kredenna were studying at Southern A&M College when a recruited suggested that they should look into becoming pediatric dentists instead of kindergarten teachers. They now practice independently, but that doesn’t mean they practice alone. On two Saturdays a month, the twins operate a satellite pediatric dental facility in Oakdale, Louisiana where they provide joint care to underserved kids, and they mentor each other throughout the week. Their slogan, “Twins Making Tiny Smiles Twinkle” helps them fulfill both their professional purpose as well as deepening their personal worldview. Katina expressed this to the News Star in 2018, stating,  “When I talk about my journey, I always include my sister, because I think about our lives as one story.” And then there’s the $2 Bill Initiative that they use to teach kids about their origin and purpose. Learn more at TwinklingSmilesOfMonroe.com and TwinklingSmilesOfBatonRouge.com.

203 North 5th St., Monroe, LA 71201   Phone: (318) 805-9000

2314 Weymouth Dr., Baton Rouge, LA 70809    Phone: (225) 926-4444

 

 

 Porterville, California

 

 

 

Drs. Elwin Hutchins and Erwin Hutchins

Courtesy of The Porterville Recorder

 Hutchins Dental

Residents in the Porterville area were very appreciative when Elwin and Erwin Hutchins quickly filled in for a retiring dentist several years ago, and they are keen to share their kind demeanor and dental care with new patients as well as long-time patients. The identical twins started in mission dentistry, serving patients in Puerto Rico, Trinidad and Tobago with very busy outreach clinics where they worked for almost two decades before returning back to their California roots. Their wives have also joined them in practice – Elwin’s wife Sonia is an assistant while Sandy is the office manager. Visit them in either of their offices, or online at HutchinsDental.net.

350 N. Second Street, Porterville, CA 93257   Phone: (559) 781-1163

100 N. Palm Street, Woodlake, CA 93286   Phone: (559) 564-8878

 

 

Sarasota, Florida

 

 

 

Drs. Amy Nulty and Leslie Nulty

Courtesy of Jason McKibben / Herald-Tribune

Mirror Image Dentistry

If there ever were a dental practice you could visit where it seemed like the dentist had cloned themselves so that they could be in two places at once, Mirror Image Dentistry would be the place. Dr. Amy and Dr. Leslie are very identical twins. New patients find it very hard to tell them apart from one another, given that they prefer to dress the same, participate in conversations where one’s sentence overlaps naturally into the others, and even work in the same close office space where they’ve been since 2001. The sisters grew up in Philadelphia and graduated from Temple University School of Dentistry.  Find out why they proudly state “Our Patients Like To Go To The Dentist” by getting in touch with them at MirrorImageDentistry.com.
 
2140 Bispham Road, Sarasota, FL 34231   Phone: (941) 929-9332

 

 

Milwaukee, Wisconsin

 

 

 

Drs. Austin Dodge and Ryan Dodge

 

As recent graduates of Marquette University, Ryan is currently practicing out of state at Howell Comprehensive General Dentistry in Virginia, but once his brother Austin completes his periodontal residency at Marquette, they could end up in a complimentary practice together, somewhere. For now, though, we’re including them here because, look at them! They’re young, they haven’t settled down yet, there’s potential for them to practice together, and who knows? They may read this and decide to cozy up to one another for convenience, for camaraderie, and for the commercial appeal held by the novelty of being an identical twin. Watch this space for updates!

 

 

Limerick, Ireland 

 

 

 

 

Drs. Cormac Shields and Conor Shields

 

Shields Dental & Implant Clinic Limerick

Ireland is fortunate to have a set of identical twin dentists in Conor and Cormac Shields, but it wasn’t by coincidence that they chose their profession. Their father and grandfather, both named Frank Shields, were dental surgeons before them. The twins’ grandfather qualified as one of the first dental surgeons in Tyrone in 1917, and their father was a pioneer in oral surgery and sedation in Dungannon. Americans will be surprised to see that the brothers list out their prices for dental procedures on their website and that they are also open on Sundays. 

 

 

 

Ever wondered what a modern dental practice looks like in Ireland? Peek into the world of Dr. Conor and Dr Cormac in the video above, as they share their history, a hint of twin dynamics, and learn more about their philosophy as they explain how they provide not only dentistry but facial esthetic services in their offices.

10 Ashdown Ctr, Courtbrack Ave, South Circular Rd, Limerick, V94 K5TX   Phone +353 61 480070

 

 

 

Brno, Czech Republic

 

 

 

Drs. Eva Luskačovy and Hana Luskačovy

 DuoSmile

In the United States it is rare for dentists to also have double degrees in both medicine and dentistry. So when identical twins each have a double degree, is this the mathematical equivalent of a being a doctor to the 4th power? This is what you’ll find if you travel to the Czech Republic to visit Dr. Eva and Dr. Hana, who established their practice together in 2017. Language is not a barrier here, as you’ll discover that both doctors and many of their team members are fluent in English. You’ll find their Facebook page enchanting, with video vignettes that range from random silly office moments to informative dental health tips. Be sure to visit their website, too, at DuoSmile.cz.

Pekařská 84, 3rd Floor Brno, 602 00     Phone +420 720 02 32

 

_________

If you know of any other sets of identical twins practicing together that you’d like to see featured here, let us know in the comments below. Thank you to all the practices, and most importantly, to the people who have made this exploration of twins in dentistry a fun journey.

Filed Under: Anecdotes, Featured, Fun Tagged With: dental practices, identical twins

Why dental insurance makes good people do bad things

January 10, 2018 By Trish Walraven 30 Comments

When I was a kid, my dad would tell me on the way to the dentist to be prepared to pay out of my own pocket for any cavities I had. $38 per filling was an insane amount of money for an eight year old with a 75 cent allowance per week and 7-Eleven candy habit. I hedged my bets that his threats were empty, that I’d get my dental care and never have to pay up.

And it worked. Since I didn’t have a proper income, my parents went ahead and took care of the bills for me, got me to the dentist, fixed those cavities right up. Instead of making me pay in cash, however, I paid up in guilt, for not taking care of my teeth like I should have.

I carried that guilt for years, right into college and ultimately into dental hygiene school, when I learned something interesting about the type of fillings that were in my teeth: if I’d had sealants as a child, there would have existed the possibility for me to grow up cavity-free. But sealants weren’t widely available to dentists until the mid-1980’s, too late to save me from the drill.

That’s the thing, though. Dental practice is not malpractice if it’s within the current standards of care, so my dentist growing up was in no way neglectful of my dental health. It’s just the way things were then. I have a bunch of pits and fissures in my back teeth full of silver instead of smooth white sealants, like my kids do – all those deep grooves they inherited from me were sealed just as soon as their permanent teeth came in.

Dentists and hygienists have a belief ingrained in us throughout our education: The best dentistry is NO dentistry, because natural healthy teeth will almost always be better than man-made teeth. We are driven to help you keep your teeth in their most natural state as possible, for your entire life. We can’t do this, though, unless you visit us for preventive care. Our experience and training lets us see the earliest signs of things that aren’t quite right in your mouth, so that we can help you take the necessary steps to correct them way before they become disfiguring, painful, or expensive.

This might be a good time then to start talking about dental insurance. Before we do that, though, let’s explore more generally. What is insurance? It’s money you pay to someone else to take care of things if the unexpected happens.

If you’re fortunate enough to never have a house fire, or die, or crash your car, there’s nothing that your insurance policies need to cover, so you’ll never get a reimbursement check. Medical insurance used to be a reimbursement system, too, until insurance companies had to come up with clever ways not to cover people’s health problems so that the insurers wouldn’t run out of money. Hospitals and doctors also became clever with their billing, and this back and forth game of “how can we make the money flow in our direction” has resulted in our current health care situation.

This cleverness has also invaded dentistry. Here are three truths that exist right now:

1. A lot of people have crappy dental plans

2. They go to dentists they don’t trust and

3. Get treatment they don’t need.

Do you want to help me change these three truths? You can, you know. We’ve done it before, you and I. You helped me get the word out that plastic in toothpaste was a bad idea, and we got that banned in the United States shortly afterwards. This is so much bigger: helping each American keep their teeth for life, at a cost they can afford.

To do this, we’re going to have to get everyone working together, but differently. You can’t change the system by just saying it needs to be changed and then doing nothing from your place within it. There’s also no ability to change if you don’t understand how to make a difference with your own actions. Right now, inadequate dental insurance is the standard of care, sort of like silver fillings were in the 70’s. Are you ready to help me move dentistry another big step forward?

Look at yourself in the mirror.

This is where it starts. With you. What do your teeth mean to you? Are their appearance important, or is it good enough that they don’t hurt and you can chew with them? Take a hard look at your teeth, and answer these two questions honestly to yourself.

Believe it or not, dentists spend a lot of time trying to guess people’s values. If you don’t know how you feel about your own teeth, then how does your dentist decide what’s right for you?

Natural teeth are going to be everyone’s first and best option. You get the first two sets of teeth for free – they’re given to you, as part of your body. If you’re fortunate enough to have parents who were able to take you for early dental care, who reminded you to brush your teeth regularly, who did their best to manage your habits and your diet, then you are less likely to need a third set of teeth. Without getting into details, let’s agree that anything dentist-made in your mouth which takes the place of natural teeth is part of the “third set.”

That dentist-made stuff, though, is the set of teeth that ends up costing a lot of money. Fixing teeth is how dentists stay in business, after all. But it’s also where insurance breaks down, on that third set of teeth. Even the best plans only cover, at most, the dollar equivalent of about 2 dentist-made teeth per year. If you have 28 teeth, that means you’ll have to use up all your benefits, every year for 14 years to get your third set of teeth paid for. If your insurance only pays for 2 teeth per year, but you have 10 teeth that are in trouble, what do you do, only treat a few and let the others all rot while you’re waiting on your insurance checks?

Something else you need to admit to yourself is to make the realization that you’re not immune to the lure of the bargain. Too often, that’s all dental insurance is. It’s sold to you as a bargain, or something that you have to have to get in the game, when the reality is that it’s only a game. Take this example:

Yep, that insurance made a $755 dent, which is big. But at what cost? Were the fillings and crowns built to last, or will they need to be replaced in less than five years since you felt you had no other dentist who would take your insurance and the one that you did go to didn’t seem to do that great of a job?

Let’s back up now and talk about your first two sets of teeth. You get the baby set as a toddler, the other set as you grow up. Both of those sets of teeth don’t cost anything; they just sort of show up one day, ready to get to work. And they need a dentist to check in with them every so often, to say hey, howya doin? Everything all right in there?

That’s what most people think of as a check up, and if you’ve had good luck with your teeth so far, it’s safe to say that having at least one dental visit per year will assure that someone’s keeping a professional watch on them.

Checkups are cheap.

Can you afford $50 per year? That’s the current average cost for a routine dental checkup in the US, across all dentists – city dentists, rural dentists, group dentists, solo dentists.

If dental checkups are not crazy expensive, then why isn’t this common knowledge?

Have you assumed that basic checkups cost more than $50? If you have, you’re like most people. It’s probably why you’ve been worried about the cost of going to the dentist, why you’ve been worried about not having insurance, why you make sure that the dentist you choose takes your plan, why you visit low cost clinics. You haven’t known the cost of the alternative.

This knowledge is your power. You can go to any dentist, and $50 is the average price for a periodic examination – this what they will charge to take a look at your mouth during a routine visit. It’s a little more for your first time, say $75-$100. A series of four bitewing xrays? Usually less than $60. Certainly not free, but all together not as much as you may have imagined.

So let’s bring insurance into our discussion once again. Remember, insurance, for everything except your body, pays nothing until there’s an unexpected event. A dental checkup is not unexpected – it’s prevention! And if you’ve ever worked with dental insurance, you know this: Almost every dental insurance policy completely covers the cost of a checkup. But they don’t do so universally. With many of those checkups, your insurance will only cover the cost if you visit certain dentists.

Dental insurance pretends to pay for your teeth.

If it really paid for them, like insurance is designed to do, it would cover the unexpected problems, especially in emergency situations. Instead, dental insurance gives you just enough coverage to make you feel like it’s a value, and scares you into thinking you can’t go to the dentist without it. Most plans offer a fixed dollar amount, around $1000, to use per year, and that’s it. If repairing your teeth costs significantly more than your maximum, it’s not protecting you. Dental insurance shouldn’t even be called insurance, because it works more like a dollar-off coupon. $1000 off of a $6000 treatment plan is at best only a 17% discount. Call yourself a sucker if you tolerated care at your “in network dentist” so that you could get less than 20% off the cost of going to a dentist of your choosing.

Dental insurance changes how dentists care for you.

We have been conditioned to believe that a procedure must be the right thing to do because “insurance will pay for it.” There is a sweet spot, right in the middle of insurance plans that covers so much more of a percentage of the total cost than either end. People with healthy teeth get basically a 20% discount for the cost of their care after taking premiums into consideration. It’s also 20% off of the cost of really expensive needs like crowns and dentures. But look how the dental benefit skews within the middle tier of dental needs:

Whoa! It jumps up to 60%. This can go one of two ways:

1. There are a few things you really need to have done, and insurance will help out a lot!

2. Your insurance will get billed for stuff you don’t need because you won’t have to pay for it yourself.

This doesn’t bother me all that much for preventive care because it’s not permanent and mostly reversible. But when dental offices intentionally “massage the insurance” to abuse this 60% sweet spot, a dentist might take a drill to a tooth that didn’t really need it, and guess what? You’re damaged. You’ve actually been broken by someone you trusted to take care of you. They took out a piece of your tooth, forever, and you can never grow it back.

Destroying healthy tooth enamel for profit makes me angry.

I’ve seen this dressed up at dental practices to make it sound like they have patient’s interests in mind. It might be called “their philosophy of care” but really, you’d be surprised how many people exist whose paychecks are dependent upon exploiting insurance codes to get the most money for their practices. “Maximizing fee schedules” is their philosophy of care. And you are a pawn to them. This is the essence of why dental insurance makes good people do bad things.

 

Exploiting Insurance Codes for Maximum Dollars.

Let’s blow this up a little and list some of the ways that insurance is abused. You may want to be on alert when you see these on your treatment plan or billing statement:

Core Buildups. This article from the American Association of Dental Consultants states, “In the last twenty years there have been a reported increase in the number of core buildups submitted to dental benefit plans out of proportion to the increase in crown submissions….Also growing are the numbers of dentists who admit, with no compunction, that they place core buildups under every crown they seat regardless of need. The financial ramifications from this trend are significant since a core buildup can add twenty to thirty percent to the final cost of a crown.”

Periodontal scaling and root planing. Often called a “deep cleaning,” gum disease treatment is the primary weapon against tooth loss, but it is a time-intensive procedure. If an office charges out periodontal therapy but you weren’t even numbed, or it took less than an hour to have treatment in all four sections of your mouth, that’s a reason for your eyebrows to go up. Also, be cautious of any dental office where your routine cleaning appointments seem super-speedy, according to this article, or if you’ve always been healthy like this person.

The need for many fillings suddenly. You’ve been off and on with regular dental care, and have had few fillings in your life. Then you visit a new dentist and are told that you have a lot of cavities. According to this article from the New York Times, some doctors may wait longer than others and “watch” small cavities, but if you feel suspicious, you should definitely seek a second opinion before the drilling starts. One pediatric dentist’s editorial on the ADA website goes so far as to call this “creative diagnosis.”

Replacement of silver fillings. Sure, they don’t last forever. But silver fillings do typically last longer than tooth-colored fillings, and if there is no pain or an obvious hole or cavity in a tooth with one, most dentists won’t try to scare you into changing them out, especially not all at once. The National Council Against Health Fraud issued this statement defending amalgams. I personally have six silver fillings that are around 40 years old, and they all still feel better than the two that were replaced.

Procedure Upselling. Any time a dental practice uses intimidation to get you to agree to something, that’s wrong, regardless of whether or not the treatment is appropriate or covered by insurance. Don’t ever feel pressured, especially if you’re in a vulnerable position, to agree to whitening, bite guards, cancer screenings, or even orthodontic care. A reputable dentist will let you take your time to make decisions about your mouth.

Suspicious dates or billing. Look over these examples of fraudulent and abusive practices; these may be signs that a practice is illegally obtaining insurance benefits on your behalf.

Preventive care is not immune.

With preventive care, dentistry as a whole tends to over-treat because, after all, “insurance will pay for it.” Big Deal, We took better care of them than they needed, who cares, we all win, blah blah. When someone feels entitled to an insurance benefit because, by George, it needs to be worth SOMETHING for all those dollars, that’s when you’ll agree when your hygienist says “see you in six months.” I guarantee that every hygienist has patients for whom getting their teeth cleaned every six months is complete overkill. Some people simply have nothing on their teeth to clean off. We spend most of your appointment scraping at stuff that’s not even there, despite our best efforts to find it. I’ve done it, lots of times, and it’s frustrating because the patient expects a cleaning every six months and we truly want everyone to feel like we’re helping them stay healthy.

That’s what I mean. There is no motivation to correct the situation. The insurance pays for cleanings every six months, so no one will challenge the perception that having your teeth cleaned twice a year is not necessary. Money is wasted, but to the patient, they “miss out on their free cleaning.”

This gets super abused in dental practices that are dependent upon patients who have insurance to stay in business. The more dependent, the more likely the abuse. That’s not to say that most dental practices are doing their best to stay within the standard of care, while carefully checking everyone’s insurance plans. Cleanings twice per year? Checkups twice per year? X-rays once per year? Everyone is treated the same. The six month visit is a safety net, and both patients and clinicians accept it because of what insurance covers, not because treatment is necessary.

On the other hand, insurance dependence can also can cause a dental practice to neglect your needs. The dentist is less likely to tell a patient to have X-rays every six months if their insurance doesn’t cover it, even if the person is suffering from severe dry mouth that is resulting in a lot of new problems that can be diagnosed with the help of more frequent imaging. If you need your teeth cleaned more often than what your insurance will pay for, an office may simply let that recommendation slide past. You are much less likely to get personalized care when you allow insurance coverage to dictate what gets done, and when. You’ve allowed yourself to be seen as “the person with insurance who is not going to pay for anything that it won’t cover.” Even if you don’t feel this way. It’s like a trap. Not just to patients, but to clinicians as well.

The Five Traps of Dental Insurance.

Trap #1: DMOs that bill for treatment above and beyond their negotiated rates. Dental Maintenance Organizations are lowest tier of dental insurance. Dentists on these plans get capitations, which are small monthly payments for being on the provider list. To be profitable they need to bill out as much treatment as they can. Patients have come for second opinions (note: always get a second opinion if you’re unsure!) after visiting a DMO practice enough times for me to see a consistent trend of overcharging for excessive care; not just hundreds, but for thousands of dollars of treatment, out of pocket. If you have insurance that only lets you go to one or two clinics that have many doctors who cycle in and out of the offices, you probably have a DMO plan.

Trap #2: Missing Tooth Clauses. Sometimes having a tooth removed is the least expensive way to get out of pain. If you’ve ever lost a tooth, unless you had your existing insurance in place, the replacement of that tooth in the future won’t get covered. So much for getting your teeth back to working order. To the insurance company, a missing tooth is considered a pre-existing condition, so it’s your responsibility, not theirs.

Trap #3: Waiting Periods. Now you have insurance, but you’ll have to wait six months to a year to pay into the system before it might give you that money back, plus a little more? Individual dental insurance plans are notorious for waiting periods.

Trap #4: Major treatment. We’ve already established that less expensive the dental service, the more likely your insurance is to cover it. What about the expensive stuff? If it costs more than $300 per tooth or section, then your insurance will most likely only cover half of that. Ever. End of story. Need dentures? A crown? A wisdom tooth removed? You’ll have to pay at least half the bill, if not more, even if you followed the rules and went to the dentist on your plan.

Trap #5: Discount dental plans. There’s one type of discount plan you should run, run, run away from – those are the referral services. They’re not really even discount plans, if the truth must be told. You pay a fee to a third party. That third party gets to keep some of your money, and in return you receive a list of dentists who will “accept” a reduced cost for a few treatments. In the meantime, the third party often encourages the dentists on their list to compensate for their reduced fees by billing for services not bound by the discount plan. I would be cautious of any dentist who uses this method to find new patients.

There would be no game of chess if the pawns refused to play.

So how do we encourage good people to stop doing bad things because of dental insurance? There’s only one way: Stop the flow of money! Have a crappy dental plan? Don’t allow your money to fund it. And if insurance abusers have no patients, they’ll eventually stop the bad behaviors.

You’d be surprised how many dentists out there would be thrilled if even half their patients decided to do everything they could to save money. The reason most dentists got into the profession? They love knowing that they’re helping people. And if the main reason you go to the dentist is to save money in the long run, they will be pleased that you chose them to partner with you to work towards that goal.

You can afford to go to the best dentists in town.

What if you could always visit the absolute best dentists, the ones that you thought only the most wealthy people visit, and you would get better and cheaper care there?

You can, and you should. The best dentist is the best, not because they cost the most, but most of the time, because they cost what you decide they cost. The best dentists have built something very important in the community that brings many people to see them.

This is where the biggest, most powerful word in dentistry comes in.

Trust.

That word goes both ways. Too many dentists don’t trust their patients to make good choices about their teeth, so they often only present one option. This is it, period. This is what your mouth needs, like it or don’t, but this is what you need, and what it costs, and this is just what we do around here and how we do it.

Instead, a good dentist will listen to the people they serve carefully, and trusts that the patient will share enough about their concerns to be able to formulate several options, not just a single option, especially for more complex care. If the financial burden even to get someone out of pain is too much, the “best dentist” is still the best value for an honest opinion. Think of them as the gatekeeper, the one who knows which dentists in your neighborhood to steer clear of, the ones who do not seem to value trust.

But they don’t take my insurance.

Seriously, you came through all of this with me, and you’re still stuck on insurance? Do you want dentists to treat your insurance, or do you want them to treat you? A good dentist’s goal is to put you in charge of your own care, and follow your values as much as possible, which is how you’ll truly end up saving money.

Should I keep using my insurance?

Sure! If you’re lucky enough to have even minimal dental insurance and you trust the practice where you’re already a patient, there’s no compelling reason to make a change just because you’re not happy with your plan. If not, it may be time to find a real dental home, one that will do honest work for honest pay, and not play games with your health, your money, and your insurance company’s money.

What is the best dental insurance?

You are fortunate if your dental insurance policy has just one or more of the following features:

  1. You pay nothing extra per month for your dental plan.
  2.  You can go to any dentist you want.
  3.  You have no maximum dollar limit.
  4.  Major services are paid for at 80%.

If none of these apply, then your insurance probably costs you more than you receive from it. My suggestion would be to opt out of your dental plan and let yourself get paid a little more per month instead. Then if you simply must be on a plan, many dentists offer their own form of in-house insurance, where you pre-pay for your preventive care each year and in return you get a percentage discount for any other services you’ll need. It’s sort of like a twice-yearly gym membership, with reduced pricing for personal training sessions.

I still wish someone else would pay for my teeth.

Me too! Wouldn’t that be great? But there came a point in my life where my parent’s money stopped being my dental insurance. I had to accept that my teeth were my responsibility, and that I would have to find a way to help them stay as natural as possible. Even with a career working daily in a dental practice, I’ve always had to pay out of pocket for the level of dental care that I value. One cleaning, checkup, and set of X-rays per year costs about $150 in my area, which isn’t worth jumping through insurance hoops for.

In the meantime, if you don’t have someone else paying for your teeth (like a rich relative or a great insurance plan), go to the best dentist you can find, explain that you’re done with “what insurance will cover” and ask them to treat you like a human being instead. You might just be surprised at the quality of care you receive for the cost.

And none of us, on either side of the equation, will miss the dental insurance game, not one bit.

 

 

Trish Walraven, RDH BS is a dental hygienist in the Dallas/Fort Worth area who is proud of the quality dental work that was placed in her mouth as a child and is still keeping her teeth strong today. She champions those who will not accept anything less than good dentistry, and hopes that her explanation of dental insurance and its flaws inspires you to share this article’s message with your friends, family, patients and colleagues.

 

References and further reading:

How not to get ripped off at the dentist:  https://askthedentist.com/
Dental insurance: A systematic review: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4278106/
USA 2016 Dental Expenditures: http://www.ada.org
Dental Insurance “Scam” or Not: https://collegetimes.co/dental-insurance/
A screenshot from a referral/payment service:  Cost Comparison screenshot
Sealant review of the literature: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/
How to Know when Tooth Fillings are Unnecessary: https://www.wikihow.com/Tooth-Fillings
The Truth About Dental Insurance: https://www.blodgettdentalcare.com/
Dental Insurance: Facts and Reality Checks: http://www.dentalleaders.com/facts/
Dr. James Pedersen, DDS. Dental Dilemma: My Experiences in the Dental HMO Field
Misrepresentations to Consumers: A Dark Side to Dentistry. http://www.dentistrytoday.com/news/

Thank you also to Concerned Dentists of Texas – https://concerneddentistsoftexas.org – for their help in mobilizing dentists to get this story out to their patients and the public.

Filed Under: Dental Debates, Featured, Money, Practice Management, Preventive Care Tagged With: affording a good dentist, best dental insurance, dental insurance, dental overtreatment, good dental practice, How insurance works

Should dental hygienists give shots?

March 15, 2017 By Trish Walraven 13 Comments

healthyteeth212

When people talk about what they hate most about going to the dentist, they’re usually talking about the needle. I mean, who in their right mind would ever consent to allowing another person to give a shot in a place that has as many nerve endings as our tongues, lips and cheeks? Shots in the mouth are pretty dang scary. And when you’re trying to calm down and prepare yourself for an injection, it’s almost worse than trying to relax for the air-burst thingy they do at the optometrist’s office when you’re getting your eye pressure checked.

cottonrollssyringe

And yet, anyone who has had significant dental treatment performed has allowed someone to inject their mouth with a needle, right? We’ve all accepted the fact that shots are so much better than the actual thing that we hate about going to the dentist.

Pain. Pain is what we really hate.

And shots? They make pain go bye-bye. No shot? You’re all-knowing (in a very bad way) about every little thing that is getting fixed in your mouth.

But you already realize this unpleasant truth. What you might not know is that there’s a stink in Texas right now about who can give shots at the dentist’s office and who can’t. Here’s a little backstory: Dentists go to college for 6-8 years to learn all the things they need to do in order to be dentists. Dental hygienists are in college for 2-4 years to learn everything they need to learn in order to be dental hygienists. In states that allow dental hygienists to give shots, their anesthesia education follows the same curriculum as dentists. These states also test dentists and hygienists to make sure that they are qualified to give shots before granting their licenses.

In Texas and five other states, this is not true. A dental hygienist’s education in regards to anesthetic delivery is considered inferior, and therefore, allowing hygienists to stick a needle in a patient’s mouth allegedly places the public in unnecessary danger.

On this map, you’ll see red states, with years next to their abbreviations. These are the states that allow hygienists to give shots, along with the dates when administration and licensing first became available. [edit: See image at update at the bottom of this article – this was amended to 47 states in 2023]

redstates

Do I think that Texas should allow dental hygienists to give shots just because “everyone else is doing it?” No. We tried being our own country once, and if we still were our own country we wouldn’t care one tiddly bit what was going on in the US.

The reason that Texas should allow dental hygienists to give shots is simple:

We are tired of hurting people.

The alternative is to ask the dentists we work with to leave a hole in their schedule so they can come give a shot for us. And come anesthetize again if the first time didn’t work. And again if our patient is still in pain.

Here in Texas, hygienists learn to say “I’m Sorry” a lot to our patients, instead of continuing to interrupt our dentists.

Thankfully, most of our patients don’t need shots. Those who come regularly have healthy mouths and their visits with the dental hygienist are preventive in nature, comfortable, maybe even relaxing. But take a person who has been scared to go to the dentist for a while and they’ve noticed that their gums bleed when they brush. There are sores in their gums, and guess what? The treatment it takes to heal up those sores can hurt! Hygienists in all states are highly trained to provide this deeper therapy – it’s what we “really” do. And if there are obstacles to providing this treatment painlessly, well, it’s either not going to be painless, or else the treatment won’t be as thorough as it would have been if it would have been if the patient had gotten completely numb.

Last week’s hearing of the Texas Senate Committee on Health and Human services highlighted the stances of those both in favor and against granting dental hygienists the permission to deliver local anesthesia, in other words “give shots.” The original video was 2 1/2 hours – I’ve shortened it down to a little under 40 minutes of testimony only about this bill, edited out all the procedural or repetitive bits, and left the juiciest parts behind.

Full video of the archived meeting: http://tlcsenate.granicus.com/MediaPlayer.php?view_id=42&clip_id=11813

Here are my bullet points, yes… •Bullet •Points for this committee meeting:

• The map handed out in the chamber is the same one you see in this article (feel free to scroll up and follow along).

• The bill is permissive, not mandatory. If a dentist does not want to allow a hygienist in their office to give shots, they can’t. Furthermore, dentists must be present in the office for hygienists to administer anesthetics.

• No evidence of harm is presented in any testimony. Scroll to 18:45 where you’ll see Dr. Scott Dowell testifying for the Texas Society of Periodontists against this bill. His admission of the relative danger of local anesthesia is…interesting.

• The Texas Dental Association states that they opposed to this bill due to patient safety because they feel that it lowers the education standard and it’s only about expanding dental hygienist’s scope of practice, possibly to open the door to independent practice by hygienists.

• Dr. Matthew Roberts, who represented the Texas Dental Association, seemed surprised to learn that physicians are legally allowed to delegate the duty of administering anesthesia shots to even medical assistants in their practice when this is brought up in the meeting.

• There are 9000 members of the Texas Dental Association, but in a poll, 53% of the members were actually in favor of hygienists giving shots.

• The amount of training dentists receive to legally put patients “to sleep” is less than the training hygienists receive in order to be legal to give shots.

If you’re not convinced by this video, then you didn’t actually watch it (my opinion, sheesh!). But if you did watch it and still feel like hygienists are unqualified to give shots, your voice is very important to us right now. Maybe there are more problems with hygienists using needles, maybe there are negative reports that haven’t been correlated properly. Do you have concerns? Post them here in the comments below. I’m serious – if there is a compelling reason that is being hidden from the public and even from hygienists, we all deserve to know the truth.

At this point, though, if the day ever comes when I’ll be able to give my patients shots, it will be like someone trusted me with the most delicate equipment available in the Compassion Toolbox. It is a precious gift to be able to deliver painless dental care, and for those in the caring business (which most of medicine is, if you think about it) sometimes it’s the best gift we can give to others.

Yuck, ick, too late, the mush landed. Bottom line? Please don’t hate me if I ever get to stick you with a needle.

Trish Walraven RDH, BSDH is a dental hygienist who lives in the suburbs of Dallas/Fort Worth. She longs for the day when she can drop a couple grand of her own money and leave her family to take a week-long college course, just so she can sit for an anxiety-provoking board exam that will grant her the license to poke a shot in places that no one wants poked. Goals, man. Goals.

UPDATE 4/5/2017:   The April newsletter from the TSBDE states that SB 430, which would authorize dental hygienists to administer local anesthetic was heard in the Senate Health and Human Services Committee on March 8, 2017.  The committee considered testimony both for and against the legislation.  The bill was voted out of the Health and Human Services Committee on April 5, 2017 with some changes.  The change is that only infiltration administration would be permitted.  The bill is now waiting to be scheduled to be heard by the full Senate.

United States Map of 47 States where local anesthesia is permitted by dental hygienists

UPDATE 5/25/2023:

It’s been six years since the original article above was posted; however, today I received the following information:

“After almost a year of collaboration between TDHA [Texas Dental Hygienists’ Association] and TDA [Texas Dental Association], legislation passed today through the Texas Senate that would allow Texas dental hygienists to administer local infiltration anesthesia.

The last step is for Governor Abbott to approve and sign the bill which would then become law. After the legislation is signed by the Governor, the Texas State Board of Dental Examiners will be tasked to write specific rules and educational requirements that will align with the intent of the legislation. This is a lengthy process that can take up to a year. The rules will then need final approval from the Governor’s Office.

Please note – this legislation allows dental hygienists to administer local anesthesia under the direct supervision of a dentist via infiltration only to patients who are over the age of 18.”

Here’s the thing: this was also the biggest bone of contention even in the 80’s and 90’s for the majority of Texas dental hygienists. For over 30 years we have been arguing for this option! That’s pretty much the scope of an entire career. Enough said – all you 50+ year olds who’ve been waiting for this day? See y’all back in college soon! 

Filed Under: Dental Debates, Featured, News, Operative Dentistry Tagged With: dental anesthesia, TDA, Texas dental hygienists

Get Listerine fluoride for free with Obamacare – maybe

January 30, 2017 By Trish Walraven Leave a Comment

magtodd

I feel very targeted right now.

It’s because I’m one of the 16% of Americans that everyone is fighting to either “guarantee insurance” for or “force insurance” upon, depending on which side of the aisle you stand.

You see, my family has Obamacare.

It’s not because we can’t afford anything else. It’s because there simply is no other major medical care available for small employers who either aren’t required to offer insurance to their employees or cannot obtain group insurance because of the size of the company. We privately purchase the exact same plan offered on the Marketplace; it’s off the exchange, though, so there are no subsidies.

Here’s the cool (mint?) reason for mentioning this on DentalBuzz. As part of a family that’s enrolled in a plan that was created due to Obamacare, I discovered by accident that there’s a way to get Listerine fluoride rinse for free.

What happened is that I was browsing through the 2017 drug formulary from my insurance company and found something called the ACA Tier. Almost every exchange-eligible plan has a No-Cost Preventive Drug List like this one from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Texas. It states in part:

Your health plan may include certain prescription and over-the-counter (OTC) preventive medicines, as a benefit of membership, at no cost to you when you use a pharmacy or doctor in your health plan’s network. There is no co-pay, deductible or coinsurance, even if your deductible or out-of-pocket maximum has not been met. Coverage for these medicines can vary according to the type of plan you are enrolled in…. Age limits, restrictions and other requirements may apply.”

So I’m going down the list and notice several entries for Listerine:

ACAFLSuppl

How can I get my free bottle, that’s what I said to myself when I read this. You want your free bottle too? Not so fast. All ACA-qualified plans are only required to cover fluoride for children under age 6. Which may mean that if you have children enrolled in Obamacare and they’re preschoolers, all you may have to do is to take your child’s bottle of Listerine up to the pharmacy window, present the insurance card, and they’re supposed to zero out the expense for you. I called my insurance company and this is what they stated. You’ll need to check your own benefit booklet first, though, because some plans only cover fluoride in other forms.

As a dental hygienist and mom, though, what’s a little perplexing is trying to figure out the label directions. We’ll go after this bottle of Listerine Smart Rinse, cause it’s cute and tough all at the same time.

smartrinseanticavityToddler-friendly? Check again.

SMRinseLabel

 

There is a huge disconnect between the FDA and the ACA, and it shows on this label! The Food and Drug Administration says you shouldn’t give it to children under six without consulting a dentist or doctor, but the Affordable Care Act pays for its use only for children that age.

Anyway, we all realize that healthcare in the United States is a work in progress. In other words, it’s a mess, right? And most of us are very much out of our element when we’re trying to figure out what’s covered and what’s not. Did you know that even most dentists and hygienists are clueless about fluoride benefits and the ACA? The only reason that I know anything myself is because I did a bit of sleuthing, found a lot of the Obamacare plans in each state, read their Preventive Drug lists, and then compiled the research. Sure, this article starts off with a little Listerine click-bait (hah! Social Marketing 101 – make ’em look!) but I do want to offer some important education, too. Here goes.

FLtabs• What do all ACA-qualified plans have in common with each other? At the very least, every insurance policy must include fluoride supplementation at no cost for children under age 5. Supplements are recommended mostly in areas where the fluoride level in water supplies are inadequate, and age five and below is the time frame when teeth can be protected most by the ingestion of fluoride. The supplements can be in the form of drops, chewable tablets, or as combination vitamins. All fluoride supplements require a prescription, either from a dentist or a physician’s office.

• Many health plans also pay for the in-office topical application of fluoride varnish. This is covered by the medical side of the plan, not the dental benefit, so you should either be savvy with using the medical code (CPT 99188) or leave it in the pediatricians’ sticky hands. Haha, sticky hands. If you’ve ever worked with fluoride varnish, it sticks to evvvverrrrry thing if you’re not careful. But hey, it’s why varnish can give up to six months of cavity protection, too. Some plans cover fluoride varnish applications as an unlimited benefit, however, I found that most plans pay for no more than two applications per calendar year.

prevdnt

• Some of the plans reviewed include prescribed and/or over the counter (OTC) topical fluoride gels, pastes, and rinses, such as the previously mentioned Listerine Fluoride, Act Rinse, Prevident, Fluoridex, Gel-Kam, Clinpro 5000, Phos-Flur, Omni Gel and others. A few of the plans even list brand-name toothpastes, although I wouldn’t count on those getting covered.

Although I reviewed somewhere in the range of 50-100 healthcare plans available, I can’t tell you specifically which fluoride products are covered by, say, Cigna versus Aetna, because they vary so much between states. You’ll have to read your plan, or better yet, call your insurance company. Be sure to share what you discover with your dentist, hygienist, or physician, so they can help your kids get the fluoride prevention that you’ve already pre-paid for.

Because, let’s face it, pre-payment is what preventive healthcare insurance is, anyways. You only “pay an ounce” for prevention, after all, so you should get at least that much back. Especially when a pound – 16 fluid ounces – of Listerine fluoride costs your insurance company only five bucks.

It sure beats the bill for a pound of actual cure.

 

 

TWimage1

Trish Walraven, RDH, BS is a dental hygienist from the Dallas/Fort Worth area who cropped out her lovely daughter in this photo because it’s very, very obvious that she’s older than five. She didn’t want the Obamacare Police to have anything on her if she did show up at the pharmacy begging for her “free” bottle of bubble-gum fluoride rinse.

 

 

References and resources

United States Census Bureau, Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2015 https://www.census.gov/library/publications/2016/demo/p60-257.html

Aetna Health Care Reform Preventive Care Drug List: https://www.aetna.com/content/dam/aetna/pdfs/formulary/2016_HCR_Preventive.pdf

American Academy of Pediatrics – Oral Health Coding Fact Sheet for Primary Care Physicians: https://www.aap.org/en-us/Documents/coding_factsheet_oral_health.pdf

Science-Based Medicine. Preventing Tooth Decay in Kids: Fluoride and the Role of Non-Dentist Health Care Providers https://sciencebasedmedicine.org/preventing-tooth-decay-in-kids-fluoride-and-the-role-of-non-dentist-health-care-providers/

Kaiser Family Foundation. Health Insurance Coverage of the Total Population: http://kff.org/other/state-indicator/total-population/?currentTimeframe=0

United Healthcare. Topical Fluoride Treatment Dental Clinical Policy: https://www.unitedhealthcareonline.comTopical%20Fluoride.pdf

Humana Pharmacy Solutions. $0 Preventive Medication Coverage: http://apps.humana.com/marketing/documents.asp?file=2838979

Kaiser Permanente. Preventive Services Flier: http://apps.humana.com/marketing/documents.asp?file=2838979

Filed Under: Featured, Preventive Care, Products Tagged With: Affordable Care Act, Fluoride, obamacare, Preventive Care Drug List

Candy that really fights cavities

February 18, 2016 By Trish Walraven 13 Comments

which tooth

Why do you get cavities? It’s not because your teeth are soft. Cavities happen in mouths where the environment is all jacked up. Too much acid, too many germs, an abundance of refined foods, too little saliva. Basically the little ecosystem in your mouth is out of whack.

How do you get it back in balance? You already know some things you can do: eat better, brush and floss better, drink water. Sometimes, though that’s not enough. What do you do between meals? Between brushing?

You change the mouth itself by changing what can grow in there.

One way is with licorice:

No, that doesn’t count, sorry. It has to be real, tar-black, sugarless licorice. Real licorice contains licorice extract (unfortunately, that’s the stuff that makes it taste way worse than Red Vines).  The way that licorice fights cavities is by changing the mouth environment so that the germs that cause cavities are inhibited.

These are licorice roots:LicoriceRoot

Licorice roots have been around ever since the original hunters and gatherers realized they were sweet-ish, quenched thirst, and tasted much better than most of the other twigs and sticks they used to dig around in their gums and teeth. Maybe they realized their teeth hurt less when they chewed on them, too. Licorice roots contain a compound called glycyrrhizin, which has been proven to reduce tooth decay. They’re cheap, natural, and abundant; you can even buy them here at this link on Amazon.com. But a word of caution: glycyrrhizin can be dangerous in excess amounts. Since licorice root is considered a natural herb, there’s no way for the FDA to regulate the dosage, and too much of it can cause heart arrhythmias, increase blood pressure, and reduce potassium levels.

If your response to black licorice and licorice roots are No, and Hell No, respectively, then how in the heck do you think you’re going to get kids to put licorice extract in their mouths?

Enter capitalism at its finest, folks.

Loloz1

When this company contacted me about a year ago, I was excited to eat free candy write a product review about something that may really help my patients prevent cavities. Remember what I was saying about licorice? Cavibloc™ is the proprietary formulation of licorice extract used in Loloz™ that you can read on their ingredient list here:

Lolozingredients

How this works

I’ve seen enough studies and listened to tons of lectures from smart people who know what they’re talking about to be convinced that the science is very strong behind using licorice extract in this way to prevent dental cavities. Here’s the biggest problem about it, though:  it doesn’t work if you don’t use it, duh. Follow the steps below to get started on this great cavity prevention regimen:

1. Overcome your objections. Just so you know, I’ve eaten practically a whole box of the berry flavored pops, given them to my kids and friends of my kids, and they taste good. Really good. No problem on the flavor at all. Also, it will cost about $90/year for three boxes. Those are the big obstacles. Everything after this is easy.

2. Buy your boxes at Amazon.com. Lookie, it even comes with Amazon Prime! Here are your flavor choices (and by the way, these are NOT affiliate links – I’m not making any money off of this, just in case you doubt my sincerity):

Loloz Berry Lollipops

Loloz Orange Lollipops

Loloz Lemon Lollipops

For people who aren’t into the whole “stick hanging out of your mouth” thing, there are candy lozenges, too:

Loloz Berry Candy

Loloz Orange Candy

Loloz Lemon Candy

3. Open up your box when it arrives.

Loloz2You’ll get 20 suckers per box… but maybe they’ll throw in a few for a bonus, with a note to let you know they didn’t count wrong. Maybe eat one of the extra ones as soon as you get them, to make sure you’re going to like them. Then…

4. Put them in the car. What? Following the recommended regimen is the most important part. It takes about 10 days of consecutive exposure time for licorice extract to disrupt the germs that cause cavities. And not just once per day. Two times per day for ten days. You’ll want to have one sucker in the morning, one in the evening. But how do you remember to have two per day? You and your kids (if you take them to school and/or work) are in your car at least twice per day. Maybe you don’t actually leave the lollipops in the car because they may get icky gooey on hot days. But you know what I mean. Discipline yourself to make sure you’re using them two times per day.

5. Repeat in 4 months. You’ll do this about three times per year for excellent cavity control, plus you get to feel good about eating candy. Whee! Over time, the bad bacteria will start creeping back in, but starting up another 10-day treatment in 3 to 4 months will help balance out the mouth environment once again.  People who get cavities easily need licorice root extract. It’s just that simple. If you’ve ever been given a prescription for high fluoride toothpaste, Loloz are for you.

So you may be asking yourself, why no one else is talking about this, why there might not be a lot of Amazon reviews on Loloz, it must not be any good, right? No, that’s not it. The company made a big push a year ago to get the word out, but marketing these days is a tricky thing for new companies. I am confident that the product is spot-on, and I’m here to reinforce again to you that balancing your mouth environment is one of the most important things you can do to prevent cavities. There are other ways to reduce tooth decay, but right now Loloz are your best bet for obtaining a proven, long-term, dose-controlled antimicrobial effect against decay-causing bacteria. And if you’re a dentist or hygienist who is thinking about recommending this to your patients, remember:

COMPLIANCE IS EVERYTHING!

…She says, with a delicious, sugar-free Loloz lollipop in her mouth.

 

 

trishlollyTrish Walraven RDH, BSDH is a mom and practicing dental hygienist in the suburbs of Dallas, Texas. She has a very, very bad sweet tooth and doesn’t take money from companies like Loloz because she’s afraid they would give her a lifetime supply of sugarless candy which would be no fun because, hey, if it’s good for you, the days of living dangerously from sugar highs just go phhhht. gone.

 

 Resources and References:

International Journal of Pharma and Bio Sciences, January 2015. “Assessing the effectiveness of liquorice root extract lollopop in reducing the S. mutans count in saliva in children aged 6-12 yrs – a pilot study.” http://www.ijpbs.net/cms/php/upload/4020_pdf.pdf

European Academy of Pediatric Dentistry, December 2010. “Clinical reduction of S. mutans in pre-school children using a novel liquorice root extract lollipop: a pilot study.” http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21108917

Medscape, January 2012. “Licorice Root May Cut Cavities, Gum Disease.” http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/756532

John C. Comisi, DDS, MAGD, April 2013. “Employing a whole-patient approach to the lifelong struggle of caries management.” http://www.dentalaegis.com/id/2013/04/oral-disease-the-battle-for-balance

British Dental Journal, December 2009. “Liquorice Alert.” http://www.nature.com/bdj/journal/v207/n11/full/sj.bdj.2009.1090.html

Filed Under: Featured, Marketing, Preventive Care, Products Tagged With: cavity prevention, dental decay, licorice extract, licorice lollipops, licorice root, Loloz, sugar-free candy

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DentalBuzz explores rising trends in dentistry with its own slant. The speed at which new products and ideas enter the dental field can often outpace our ability to understand just exactly the direction in which we are heading. But somehow, by being a little less serious about dentistry and dental care, we might get closer to making sense of it all.

So yeah, a tongue-in-cheek pun would fit really nicely here, but that would be in bad taste. Never mind, it just happened anyways. Stop reading sidebars already and click on some content instead.

Recent Posts

  • Dentists Rejoice over the Leica Camera Tariffs
  • It’s not OK for your dental practice to use free cloud-based communication
  • Patients ask, “Is it safe to go back to the dentist?”
  • Free “return to work guide” from the American Dental Association
  • Why COVID-19 increases your need for contactless payments
  • A virtual care package from worried dental hygienists
  • Lead Aprons feel so good! Here’s why.
  • What is this $&!% on my toothbrush?
  • The Prophy Jet Challenge
  • How to trick kids into brushing their teeth
  • These identical twins can both be your dentist
  • Why dental insurance makes good people do bad things

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