Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH's orthodontist worked in finance for 8 years before going to an Ivy dental school on full scholarship so had no debt and ton of savings and investments.
If you were good at finance, why inna hell would you want to be an orthodontist?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s because todays Dentists moved to a different model.
My dentists from the 1960s to 1980s worked out of house they lived in. My dentist growing up took no dental insurance. He did not even have a computer. The emergency after hours number was their home phone number.
The wife, or kid or maybe part time stay at home mom took appointments. You paid by check day of or they mail you a bill you mail back check and wife usually dropped off checks at local bank. They often owned one car as husband worked out of house and wife SAHM. Dentist did cleanings too so no staff or had a local young girl help part time.
Today my dentist lives in an expensive home in Potomac. He rents an expensive office in Bethesda. Him and wife two luxury cars, he takes insurance and has multiple staff front desk as well as multiple employees. It is a very expensive business model. It is not sustainable.
If he got rid of Bethesda office, got rid of staff, got rid of his luxury car and worked out of home and had wife or local college student book appointments and stopped taking insurance his expenses would be way way less. In face he be charging less and making way more
So your solution to the problem of the high costs of dental care is to freeload off the unpaid labor of women. And you think all dentists are hetero married men with stay at home wives. No one here is interested in your opinions.
Anonymous wrote:You can not argue against the fact that there has been to significant increase in reimbursement from insurance companies.
If cost of everything including education has gone up but you're still getting paid the almost the same as 20 years ago, then your personal income is going down.
Delta dental pays $36 for a dental cleaning code, same as 20 years ago. The person cleaning your teeth has gone from $36 to $70/ hour now so the dentist is eating the extra cost. TRUST ME on this, its our reality.
I would not send my kids to dental school.
For those who are wondering, average dentist salary is still at 150k, same as it was 2010. Yes there are some that make more but the AVERAGE is 150K, no way around it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH's orthodontist worked in finance for 8 years before going to an Ivy dental school on full scholarship so had no debt and ton of savings and investments.
If you were good at finance, why inna hell would you want to be an orthodontist?
Anonymous wrote:Mine are all immigrants’ kids. So I assume had lots of scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s because todays Dentists moved to a different model.
My dentists from the 1960s to 1980s worked out of house they lived in. My dentist growing up took no dental insurance. He did not even have a computer. The emergency after hours number was their home phone number.
The wife, or kid or maybe part time stay at home mom took appointments. You paid by check day of or they mail you a bill you mail back check and wife usually dropped off checks at local bank. They often owned one car as husband worked out of house and wife SAHM. Dentist did cleanings too so no staff or had a local young girl help part time.
Today my dentist lives in an expensive home in Potomac. He rents an expensive office in Bethesda. Him and wife two luxury cars, he takes insurance and has multiple staff front desk as well as multiple employees. It is a very expensive business model. It is not sustainable.
If he got rid of Bethesda office, got rid of staff, got rid of his luxury car and worked out of home and had wife or local college student book appointments and stopped taking insurance his expenses would be way way less. In face he be charging less and making way more
Would you go to a dentist that worked out of his house?
Anonymous wrote:I'm an endodontist and make almost 7 figures working 3 days a week. I graduated in 2014, so student loans were only $315K, but still...I think it was worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Which dental schools are giving out scholarships? fake news lol
Universities love dental students because - like MBA students - they are cash cows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always figured that for dental and vet school you need a rich parent that can buy everything up front.
You don’t need to spend the money to open your own office right after graduation. It isn’t even advisable. You take over your dad's practice.
Fixed that for you.
It's a nepo world, the rest of us just live in it.