Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Angry,Jealous People

A dentist on the IDF Dental Forum decided to visit my website and read my blogs and send emails to the rest of the IDF group. The dentist reported that I criticized and demeaned other dentist (see my blog posting 'Dentists are Lousy at Dentistry.) He furthermore told the group that I was marketing to my readers that 'I claimed to be THE BEST DENTIST.' Lastly, he claimed that all I blogged about was how great a dentist I am and that I was claiming to have a bogus certificate of proficiency in esthetic dentistry from SUNY/Buffalo.


In 1995, at one of my early courses in esthetic dentistry, Dr. George Friedman gave our class words of encouragement at our completion ceremony. He told us that once we started taking many courses,our colleagues back home would hate us, feel threatened and be jealous because we would know more than they did.


BOY WAS HE RIGHT!!!!!


I would like to respond to some of the charges that the IDF member dentist made:


1. It is illegal and unethical in the State of NY for a dentist to claim that they are THE BEST dentist or that they are superior to another dentist. Never...NOT ONCE do I state that I am the best ,dentist. In fact, I have often told you that Newton Fahl is THE BEST restorative resin dentist in the world...But I have told you that I aspire to be like Dr.Fahl. You will never find one sentence in all the years that I have been blogging that I state that I AM the best dentist. Do I aspire to EXCELLENCE? YOU BET I DO!


2. The dentist claims that my blogs are only about ME. I recently blogged that the CNN columnist John Avalon reported that the liberal health care program (Obamacare) was the brainchild of the Conservative think tank,The Heritage Foundation as an alternative to Hillary Clinton's health care proposals.WHO KNEW????? And didn't I tell you about the story that 44 percent of folks on Social Security did not believe that they were participating in a government program? Or the jazz concert that I went to and there were no young people in the audience and I blogged that we must raise our children to appreciate the arts before they disappear?


3. The Certificate of Proficiency that I earned from SUNY/Buffalo was approved by the American Dental Association and sanctioned by the New York State Board of Regents. While SUNY/Buffalo no longer offers the Certificate, The University of Minnesota Dental School DOES grant the Certificate...And as Casey Stengel,the old NY Yankees manager used to say, "You can look it up."


No one likes to have their reputation or their integrity questioned. My job was, is and will always be to take care of you the best that I can.


Glad that I got that off of my chest.


(Aside: In the year that I have been a member of the IDF, I did not see one dentist show any of their clinical dentistry to the group other than me. WHY???)

Friday, September 7, 2012

Dentists Are Lousy at Dentistry

"Are you kidding me?"
"I can't believe that YOU are saying this."

I watched both the Republican and Democratic Conventions and I looked at people's teeth as the cameras surveyed the audience. What I saw was horrific crowns, poorly done fillings and lots of crooked teeth and gaps.

What does this tell me about the state of dentistry in America? It says that many dentists are not well educated and are not willing to inform and educate their patients about the wonderful materials and techniques available in dentistry today.

Crooked teeth??? Invisilign clear retainers will permit the straighening to teeth without unsightly and uncomfortable braces that we see children have.

Crowns on front teeth with black lines??? Why would anyone place a Porcelain fused to metal crown when dentists have beautiful, tooth colored and very strong all ceramic crowns.

I was grateful for one thing when I looked at the audience at both conventions.
None of my patients have smiles that look as bad as the smiles that I saw :)

Monday, September 3, 2012

The Facts Based in Reality

I have no idea which side of the political spectrum the journalist John Avlon of CNN, Newsweek and The Beast comes from. Nor do I know or care how he votes. What I did find interesting in his recent column was the following:

"...the heated debate over Obamacare is intentionally mischaracterized as a "government takeover of health care" despite that there's no public option for health insurance, let alone a single payer.

Whatever its many flaws, the individual mandate was a plan initially put forward by the conservative Heritage Foundation, proposed by Republicans as an alternative to "Hillary Care" in the 1990s. It was implemented in his state by Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, who argued it advanced the virtue of personal responsibility. But "government takeover of health care" polls better, and so it is repeated in the echo chamber until facts start to fade."

Something to think about when we think we know the facts.

My patients

I always inform my patients that I am a general dentist who limits my practice to fixing teeth and restoring implants with everything rising to the level of art. In addition, I also tell my patients that I am a general dentist with a specialty in esthetic dentistry by virtue of the fact that I have a Certificate of Proficiency in Esthetic Dentistry from SUNY/Buffalo School of Dental Medicine; only about 100 dentists in the nation hold this certificate.

My patients believe that I am a specialist and that many if not all of my patients are very wealthy. Just last week, a new patient in my practice who recognized that she needed a highly talented dentist (her words) told me that she knows that many of the patients in my practice are 'high profile people.'

The overwhelming majority of the patients in my practice are middle class folks just like the majority of Americans. I am blessed to have some of the most successful people in the Capital District as my patients and I believe that they are looking for the best dental care that they can find in our area. I have had more than one patient in my practice tell me that they must sacrifice in other areas of their life to come to my practice but that they feel that it is worth it.

The most significant thing that my patients must know is that each and every one of you are very important to me and my staff and that we will do everything possible to take care of you at the highest possible level.

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Being Your Doctor

We have many opportunities throughout the week to see patients that are having other medical issues and are besides themselves because local physicians are unable to pin down a diagnosis. I am a big fan of the TV program, Mystery Diagnosis and it amazes me how long it takes and how much treatment the poor patient has before a wise doctor decides that the patient neeeds to see a true expert which is usually in a differenct city.

I have been treating a patient for a few years who was diganosed with a significant auto-immune disease and treated with some potent medications. I strongly suggested that she leave the Capital District and obtain a consultation at the reknown, Mayo Clinic. When I saw my patient last week, she told me that she DID in fact go to the Mayo Clinic and that she definitely did not have the illness for which she had been treated for the last five years.

I examined a relatively new patient recently and she told me that she was having a significant amount of trouble with her ankle and that she was going to have surgery locally. I strongly suggested that she go to Hospital For Special Surgery in Manhattan for a second opinion. She was examined by one of the best ankle surgeons in the country who told her that she needed an ankle replacemnt and that probably no one in the Albany area would be able to treate her problem.

My job is to take care of you and I will do everything possible to make sure that you receive great care.

Monday, August 13, 2012

Why Patients Travel

I restored a tooth for one of my long term patients who has been with me for 30 years. As with most of my long term patients, we have become friends and he knows that I will do the very best that I can to take care of him. Before I had given Don some novocaine, he told me that he had seen two of my former patients and that they had been treated by their new dentist and it was just not the same as when I was their dentist.

Sometimes our best patients are former patients who left our office to find another dentist. When they decide to return to our office, they first have to convince Donna that they are now sincere about their oral health. Almost every person that we accept back into the fold apologizes for leaving and recognizes that a dentist is not a dentist; Traveling to Saratoga now becomes a non issue.

I thank all of you who have remained my patient all of these years. No one cares more about taking care of you than I do.And I believe that you know that.

Sunday, August 5, 2012

"The Defense of Mediocrity2"

The discussion on the IDF dental forum on the 'rights' of mediocre dentists to be mediocre continues and those dentists rising up to support mediocre dental treatment is deafening.

It is astounding to me that a dentist would go on an international forum DEFENDING mediocrity. The dentist from Pennsylvania stated that we must be accepting of average dentists posting their work so that the below average might see this and 'aspire' to mediocrity.

Oh really???????????????

This is like saying average level athletes have a RIGHT to appear in the Olympics.

Forget the fact that I am a dentist and this is a dental blog. What is happening to our great nation when mediocre is not only tolerated by celebrated?

Mind you...when I posted my comments, it was NOT to criticize the actual treatment of the dentist. It was a gentle reminder that if you are going to show your work to the world, there are acceptable ways to do that ie take one's gloved finger out of the photo by using cheek retractors.

I guess that a patient has a right to select a mediocre physician or dentist but then I wouldn't be their dentist.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

"In Defense of Mediocrity"

In 1970, Senator Roman L. Hrushka spoke in support of Judge G. Harrold Carswell's nomination to the Supreme Court of the United States. The problem was that the American Bar Association and other legal groups considered the Judge to be mediocre at best but the Senator gave a speech on the floor of the United States Senate supporting Judge Carswell in which he said,

"Even if he were mediocre, there are a lot of mediocre judges and people and lawyers. They are entitled to a little representation, aren't they, and a little chance? We can't have all Brandeises, Frankfurters and Cardozos."

Yesterday, a dentist from Arkansas posted a case that personified mediocrity. The rules of case presentation strongly recommend that you not present a photograph with the dentist's fingers holding up the lips and using cheek retractors is required. The dentist stated that he 'didn't have time to use cheek retractors' (which take approximately 5 seconds to use)and his fingers were fine. Also, his patient had told him that she hated her smile and asked for suggestions so he very marginally improved her smile with a "little reshaping" of her teeth.

Those of you that are my patients or are readers of my blog know how I feel about professionals who are mediocre. When I placed a response to the dentist's case presentation on the dental forum, I gently suggested that he used cheek retractors and he had an obligation to do a direct resin mockup to ACTUALLY show the patient treatment options.

Other dentist were highly insulted that I would be critical of another dentist and posted that I was out of place in my very gentle suggestions. Yes, I am intolerant of mediocre dentist who take patients hard earned money and refuse to do their best.

Senator Hrushka was very wrong, in my opinion, when he stated that mediocrity on the Supreme Court should be acceptable and encouraged.

I will defend your right to Excellence in dental treatment whenever another dentist speaks in support of mediocre dentistry.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

The Olympics Select the Best

There is no doubt that virtually every athlete in competition at the London Olympics is in the realm of world class. Competition leaves no doubts about who the best of the best are in each event. Athletes love to compete with each other as a means of rating themselves in the events in which they compete.
Dentist on the other hand, HATE to compete against each other because losing would mean that patients might leave one dentist for another, more competent clinician. And by not competing, it allows each dentist to claim that they are as good as the next dentist in the neighborhood.

In 1999, I entered one of my cases in the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry Smile Contest in San Antonio, Texas. My staff an I believed that the results that we achieved for our patient was spectacular and worth showing other dentists what we had accomplished. The cases were shown to independent judges without any indications of which dentists had completed the work and my case was selected as THE BEST IN CLASS for the type of work that we had done. All of the nationally recognized dentists who I had studied with came over to congratulate me on my spectacular achievement and it was at that moment that I became nationally recognized for my work.

Winning the contest was secondary to becoming the first American dentist to attain a Certificate of Proficiency in Esthetic Dentistry from the State University of NY at Buffalo and to date, there are probably fewer than 75 dentists in the country with a University based Certificate and none in the Capital District.

Many patients and dentists believe that all dentists possess the same level of knowledge, skill, talent and passion and that it is way too difficult to find 'the best' dentist even if one exists. The fact is that today it is very easy for one dentist to distinguish him or her self from other dentists.

I won a nationally held contest, I post my work on international dental websites for other dentists to critique, I teach and mentor other dentists and my passion for my work has never been greater.If a patient wants to find a highly proficient dentist, it would be very easy to do.

I love my work and I hope that it shows!

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

The Ace in the Hole

"Ace in the hole" is an old expression meaning that you have something in reserve just in case you need to get out of a challenging situation.

I saw a patient today who I treated 11 years ago when I virtually rebuilt her entire front tooth with resin bonding. Today she presented with the resin veneer in a plastic bag as it had come off of her tooth. These restorations are not meant for long term use and are generally used when a patient can't afford a crown.

I meticulously cleaned the resin veneer and the remaining natural tooth and carefully rebonded the restoration back onto the tooth and who knows, the patient may keep the restoration for a quarter of a century.

At the end of the appointment, my patient tells me that she has her routine dentistry done by her "REGULAR DENTIST." I always chuckle to myself when patients tell me that they only come to me when there they have a challenging dental problem. Some people keep me as their "Ace in the hole" instead of their regular dentist.
I AM a 'regular' dentist. lol