Anonymous wrote:I need an extraction and implant and I'm finding that it is extremely difficult to identify a good periodontist that is in network. Not saying that there aren't any, just that they are hard to ID among the multitudes listed in my insurance plan. Angie's list and yelp are not that helpful. It seems like the dental field is saturated with one stop shop dentists which is a red flag for me - I won't go to a dentist who does root canals and implants on top of general dentistry. Getting to your question, I've visited several periodontists and the standout is not in network but is 30-50% higher. I'm contemplating just going with him because he impressed me the most and mouth surgery is not something I want to take a chance on.
Anonymous wrote:I need an extraction and implant and I'm finding that it is extremely difficult to identify a good periodontist that is in network. Not saying that there aren't any, just that they are hard to ID among the multitudes listed in my insurance plan. Angie's list and yelp are not that helpful. It seems like the dental field is saturated with one stop shop dentists which is a red flag for me - I won't go to a dentist who does root canals and implants on top of general dentistry. Getting to your question, I've visited several periodontists and the standout is not in network but is 30-50% higher. I'm contemplating just going with him because he impressed me the most and mouth surgery is not something I want to take a chance on.
Anonymous wrote:My dermatologist doesn't take insurance. But she's awesome, fits me or my kids in same day and I have an extensive history of skin cancer and greatly appreciate her approach to it.
Anonymous wrote:Not for dentistry but I've got SN kids and very few of their specialists take insurance. IME, the best ones don't have to. Now, I'm not saying there aren't good providers in-network and I'm certain there are lousy providers that don't take insurance. Just don't assume that someone who doesn't take insurance isn't a good provider.