Reform of dental industry

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:PP here. Forgot to add that I do think it's criminal that dental and eye care is not covered. These are part of health and wellbeing and no excuse for what we have here in the US.


Especially because life expectancy has risen.
And the American food system is less whole. Even if you eat mostly healthy, we’re now exposed to many more of these soft/mushy/cakey foods that surround the tooth. Goldfish needs to be flossed much more than chicken or pork!

With us living longer, we need our teeth to last us longer!
Anonymous
So you all think your medical insurance should cover dental treatment? For no additional charge?

Sorry. Doesn’t work that way.

There is dental insurance on the market. Buy it if you want.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How is all the upselling legal? When I go to an MD or NP or PA they don't upsell other services?

So much of dentistry is unregulated and seems like invented procedures to make more money like two phase braces for most kids, selling expensive electric toothbrushes, in office whitening, insisting you need crowns when a filling will do, etc.


This is the biggest scam. Every single NW DC family I know just ponied up the $15K for this and they all started with reasonable teeth. So ridiculous.


I have 3 kids. For one of them, the orthodontist said — it’s just cosmetic, I could fix it in 3 months if you care. We opted not to bother. For another, they said it’s a minor issue and can be fixed in 6-9 months. For the third, she had every problem you can have and it took years to get it fixed. So my experience was that they didn’t just sell all us on the most expensive plan in all cases.

I also have a dentist that never upsells me. I always think the price of the cleaning is actually a really good deal considering how important it is.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:How is all the upselling legal? When I go to an MD or NP or PA they don't upsell other services?

So much of dentistry is unregulated and seems like invented procedures to make more money like two phase braces for most kids, selling expensive electric toothbrushes, in office whitening, insisting you need crowns when a filling will do, etc.


This is the biggest scam. Every single NW DC family I know just ponied up the $15K for this and they all started with reasonable teeth. So ridiculous.


Yes. My older child had horrible teeth and I do think two phase made sense for her. I was scammed by doing two phase with my younger. I’m still trying to figure out how to respond. The last day of my younger DS’s treatment, the ortho asked if we wanted to roll right into phase 2. Why would it even be separated out if it could start right away??

It can make sense sometimes but seriously look into this. It’s not needed unless there are major major issues.


The need for two phases is that your child is still growing

Same reason why they won't do serious orthognathis surgery or nose jobs until a child's face stops growing

That's it. That's the answer.

They need to make sure the teeth / nose / jaw fits your child's face for a permanent lifetime


Do you realize you pointed out how scammy it is. Do plastic surgeons do two phase nose jobs? No they wait. Just like they used to do with braces.


Plastic surgery is not performed on growing children.
Anonymous
Part of the challenge is the ecosystem that has grown up around dentistry. Dental schools are big business for universities. Not to mention the dental tool / device industry. And then people involved in these related enterprises are invested in making dental health a big deal as part of human nature to want to make meaning in their work. And the result is more visits (when I was young routine care was once a year, now it’s twice with X-rays annually) where it seems like a new service is added pushed each time I go.

I didn’t go to the dentist for 3 years but took very good care of my teeth at home. No issues when I had a cleaning this year. I have gone when I’ve had issues (crossing teeth corrected through Invisalign, sensitive patch on gum, weird bump that was a bone spur, etc) but I’m not at all convinced cleanings are needed for adults who take good care of their teeth at home.
Anonymous
I believe 2 stage is necessary in some cases due to genetics. I got my dads small mouth and my moms large teeth. Back in the day the solution was to pull teeth, so my siblings and I are all missing quite a few teeth but the ones we have are straight. FF my kids, nieces and nephews that needed braces went through 2 phase with a palate expander. They have gorgeous smiles in mouths that fit their faces, while their parents all have narrow faces.

Anyhow, my fed medical insurance covers two cleanings a year and we all brush and floss daily. I'm pretty happy with this ie personal responsibility daily and 2x yearly check. The upselling drives me nuts, but no is a complete sentence.
Anonymous
Humans need healthy teeth and gums. Dental health should be included in healthcare. Cosmetic procedures are elective and paid by patient/consumer unless medically necessary.

Same with vision.

No reason either of these should be separate from healthcare.

Anonymous
Our largest out of pocket expenses are for dental and veterinary care.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My oldest child ever had a cavity. When he was about to age out of our dental insurance suddenly the dentist claimed he had 10 cavities. We stopped going there and they spam us with calls and emails constantly.

And yeah, my adult child's new dentist found no cavitiies.


I'm 60 and have never had a cavity in my life (go for cleanings probably once a year). About 15 years ago the dentist I had been going to for years sold his practice. The first time I saw the new dentist who bought the practice, she told me I had a mouth full of cavities and had to come back and get them all filled. I went to a different dentist who said I had absolutely no cavities. I wish I had reported her to whatever licensing board exists for dentists. This was just criminal!

On another note, private equity is getting into the dental (and vet) business big time. My brother-in-law was a dentist on the west coast for 30+ years. Last year he retired and sold his practice. 95% of the interested buyers were private equity firms who were buying up tons of dental practices and turning them into PE-backed chains. He ended up selling to a single dentist who wanted to expand her practice.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I agree that dentists are scammy and the whole industry is out of control.

Vision is also kept out of health insurance for some reason but the industry isn’t so scammy.


I feel like vision is scammy! They should be required to give a PD as part of the RX
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Some of it goes back to the early 90s (?) when the AMA signed up to participate in HMOs while the ADA did not. Ever since, dentistry has been a major cash business with significant insurance involvement, but a whole lot of people don't carry dental insurance at all.

Everyone's got teeth, old young male female, and when they need to be emergently cared for, it's not optional. Dentists frequently do better than even MD specialists.


In other words, dentistry is an illegal anticompetitive trust.


I think at the time the ADA just recognized that it was going to be a bad deal for practitioners.

Modern conglomerate managed care certainly hasn't helped the bottom line of medical practitioners in terms of either compensation or lifestyle or even actual ability to deliver quality care, because they're no longer in charge of the terms of their own practice.

Dentists and oral surgeons don't have to deal with any of that oversight.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My oldest child ever had a cavity. When he was about to age out of our dental insurance suddenly the dentist claimed he had 10 cavities. We stopped going there and they spam us with calls and emails constantly.

And yeah, my adult child's new dentist found no cavitiies.


To be fair, that truly just sounds like a shitty dentist.

I guess my kids always had a great dentist, though, because my BIL is an orthodontist.

There was a dentist for a while in my town who practiced out of an addition to his house. My BIL said "don't go to that guy"

Bad lawyers good lawyers, bad dentists good dentists. People like a bargain if they have to pay out of pocket.

One thing about consolidating managed healthcare on the MD side is that once you become a potential liability, they will have no hesitation to cut you loose. And you can't suddenly order 15 new tests without overhead approval. Or maybe you can, but no one really has to listen to you.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I can't quote it because it's so large but I don't have outdoor cats

Actually half my cats are rescued from Turkey, they were street cats. They had to be vetted and vaccinated before they were flown here into the US. I have four of them. They live in indoor luxury.

I'm mostly talking about the dogs who have to be walked.


Immigrant cats !!!!
Anonymous
The scam is that for some reason, taking carae of your mouth/teeth isn't considered "healthcare" ... why is "dental insurance" something different? Same for vision -- I guess taking care of your eyes isn't part of your health either?

None of it makes sense.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Why no one raises their voice against this industry? Their costs are astronomical and rules and regulations are really foggy which gives dentists charge as much as they want. Why isn't it part of medical insurance and why cash costs are out of control? Is there anyone here who can take up this cause and get government and industry to work on making it affordable for Americans?


Well, you can demand your electeds to include dental care in the ACA. Maybe the GOP can include this in their concept of a plan.
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