“Pearl
of the Month” (Vol. 1, Issue 4)
Pertinent
comments on the practice of fee-for-service dentistry.
by Michael Perry, D.D.S., President
Presentation of Ideal Treatment...
Do Patients need or just want what we are selling?
Ten-plus years ago, when I was active on my local dental society
board, our members were very concerned about the managed care
juggernaut that was moving up the freeway from the souththreatening
to engulf our local dental community. One of the resistance
strategies I adopted was to do a literature review that would
hopefully uncover some obscure bits of evidence-based dentistry
that would connect managed care delivery systems to poor quality
treatment outcomes.
To my dismay, I not only failed to find articles with the
right philosophical bend, I found long term studies performed
within the confines of Britains socialized dental care
system that concluded there was no correlation between a patients
life span and the age when his/her teeth were replaced with
complete dentures. In short, people who lost their teeth at
an early age lived just as long as those who went through
life without ever losing theirs.
The scientific credibility of these studies aside, the revelation
that dental treatment was rarely increasing patients
life span, but often increasing their quality of life was
profound for me. This meant that dentists are providing services
that, for the most part, are discretionary for patients and
therefore must be sold rather than mandated as necessities
for health.
Few business people outside of dentistry would disagree with
the idea that dental case presentation is a form of sales
and that successful sales requires an effective technique.
I have developed a technique for my practice which incorporates
thorough diagnostic protocol with effective sales strategies.
The steps are:
Patient interview
Permission statement
Comprehensive examination
Ideal treatment presentation
Fee quotation
Negotiation
Financial arrangement
Most dentists are analytical in nature and feel most comfortable
presenting to patients by explaining proposed treatment in
great detail. One of my early mentors once stated that dentists
often spend 3 minutes selling a case and the next 10 buying
it back. We erroneously assume patients share our passion
for details and end up creating uncertainty and confusion
in the process. I found it much more effective to communicate
to each patient what I think would be ideal for them based
upon their goalswithout them feeling pressured to accept
treatment. Most often, my technique is successful with patients
deciding to accept some, if not all of the treatment I present.
In addition, my thoroughness creates feelings of confidence
and trust within the patient, my team, and myself that in
turn increase my personal fullfillment, profitability, and
practice growth. Isnt that what fee for service practice
is all about?
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