I've suddenly realized that amalgam removal occurs when for instance a filled tooth breaks, requiring a crown. I'm remembering my last dental visit for that particular kind of work--no precautions were taken at all for the patient (the dentists and staff were well gloved and masked but only against blood contamination I think). In fact I was surprised to find that they didn't even have the old chairside sink with running water. I had to ask for water to rinse with after the entire procedure was over.

The point being that amalgam removal contamination occurs even when removal isn't the primary purpose.

Deborah




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