A Free-Reprint Article Written by: Peter Gopal, Ph.D. 

Article Title: 
Fewer Broken Appointments Mean a More Profitable Dental Practice

See TERMS OF REPRINT to the end of the article.

Article Description:
On a daily basis, a dentist and staff probably spend more
time discussing and dealing with the topic of appointment
cancels, broken appointments, and no-shows than any other
subject. It is a source of endless frustration. Downtime is
also the biggest single source of lost revenue.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

608 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2010-01-26 12:00:00

Written By:     Peter Gopal, Ph.D.
Copyright:      2010
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]



For more free-reprint articles by Peter Gopal, Ph.D., please visit:
http://www.thePhantomWriters.com/recent/author/peter-gopal,-ph_d_.html


=============================================
Special Notice For Publishers and Webmasters:
=============================================

HTML Copy-and-Paste and TEXT Copy-and-Paste 
Versions Of Article Are Available at:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/g/reducing-missed-appointments.shtml#get_code

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Fewer Broken Appointments Mean a More Profitable Dental Practice
Copyright (c) 2010 Peter Gopal, Ph.D.
Visionary Management
http://www.visionary-management.com/



On a daily basis, a dentist and staff probably spend more time
discussing and dealing with the topic of appointment cancels,
broken appointments, and no-shows than any other subject. It is a
source of endless frustration. Downtime is also the biggest
single source of lost revenue.

A full appointment book translates to revenues and production
only if the patients come in. If a practice loses 1 to 2
appointments/day, either on the hygienist's schedule or on the
dentist's schedule, the lost production from this could be
anywhere from $150 (minimally) to $700 per day, depending upon
the procedure. Assuming 200 working days during the year, the
annual lost production works out to $30,000 at the low end to
$140,000 at the high end.

Those figures are for a solo practitioner, with one full-time
hygienist. The figures multiply for a multi-doctor office, with
more than one hygienist. Improving practice performance in this
one area alone could significantly improve the financial status
of many dental practices.

It is not possible to eliminate appointment cancels completely,
as patients do have legitimate reasons for canceling. However,
with proper systems in place, and motivated, diligent staff, it
is possible to reduce broken appointments up to 75%. Start with
these three fundamental routines.

Three Surprisingly Effective Steps to Fewer Broken Dentist
Appointments

1. Communicate the value and the need for treatment or preventive
care.

 * Involve your staff in educating the patient. Your dental
assistant and hygienist play a crucial role in educating the
patient.

 * Develop verbal skills that convey to the patient the
consequence of not completing the treatment. Patients are often
under the impression that no treatment is necessary, unless there
is pain. Most conditions in dentistry are dormant. Compare dental
treatment to other insidious medical conditions such as high
blood pressure, which patients may understand.

 * Your entire staff should role play and master verbal skills
for all the procedures. Go over and learn to head off typical
patient concerns and objections.

 * Convey the value of preventive care exams and cleanings.
Emphasize that regular exams and check-ups preserve health, save
suffering, and save money too. Compare preventive care to some
thing they can relate to, for example, automobile oil changes.
Patients take their cars in for routine oil changes even though
the car does not make a noise; they do not wait for their engine
to seize.

2. Use technology to educate the patient and involve them in
diagnosis.

 * Use as many visual tools as possible for diagnosis. Purchase
an intra-oral camera if you don't have one. When the patient
sees what you see, they are more likely to understand the need
for work.

 * Play a patient education DVD on a TV monitor in your treatment
room. This is an invaluable tool, allowing you to educate the
patient without spending a lot of time.

 * Use tables, charts, and other data-recording tools. Patients
like to see or hear scientific evidence. If you are
perio-charting, tell them what a normal pocket depth is before
you start measuring the pocket depth. Then, as your hygienist
reads out the numbers for the assistant to record, the patient
hears the data and can deduce for themselves the health of their
periodontium.

 * Demonstrate the problem with three-dimensional models when
applicable and possible.

3. Discuss the cost for treatment before scheduling the patient.

 * If it is an insurance patient, be sure to tell them that what
you are providing is an estimate for their out-of-pocket expense.

 * Schedule the appointment only after the cost is discussed.
Also, discuss the number of visits necessary and what would be
done at each visit.

 * If the patient has a financial issue, offer payment options. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Peter Gopal, PhD, together with his wife, Hema Gopal, M.B.A. and 
D.M.D., consults with dentists who are intent on building a more 
profitable practice.  Whether you are leaving money on the table 
due to broken patient appointments, improper scheduling, poor 
case acceptance, low hygienist productivity, excessive overhead, 
or unnecessary reliance on PPOs, they can pinpoint your 
weaknesses and prescribe remedies.  Receive a free, realistic 
assessment of the earning potential of your dental practice by 
going to: http://www.visionary-management.com/assessment.php


--- END ARTICLE ---

Get HTML or TEXT Copy-and-Paste Versions Of This Article at:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/g/reducing-missed-appointments.shtml#get_code



.....................................

TERMS OF REPRINT - Publication Rules 
(Last Updated:  May 11, 2006)

Our TERMS OF REPRINT are fully enforcable under the terms of:

  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act
  http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c105:H.R.2281.ENR:

.....................................

*** Digital Reprint Rights ***

* If you publish this article in a website/forum/blog, 
  You Must Set All URL's or Mailto Addresses in the body 
  of the article AND in the Author's Resource Box as
  Hyperlinks (clickable links).

* Links must remain in the form that we published them.
  Clean links should point to the Author's links without
  redirects having been inserted into the copy.

* You are not allowed to Change or Delete any Words or 
  Links in the Article or Resource Box. Paragraph breaks 
  must be retained with articles. You can change where
  the paragraph breaks fall, but you cannot eliminate all
  paragraph breaks as some have chosen to do.

* Email Distribution of this article Must be done through
  Opt-in Email Only. No Unsolicited Commercial Email.


* You Are Allowed to format the layout of the article for 
  proper display of the article in your website or in your 
  ezine, so long as you can maintain the author's interests 
  within the article.

* You may not use sentences from this article as an input
  for any software that steals sentences from others in 
  order to build an article with software. The copyright on
  this article applies to the "WHOLE" article.


*** Author Notification ***

  We ask that you notify the author of publication of his
  or her work. Peter Gopal, Ph.D. can be reached at:
  [email protected]


*** Print Publication Reprint Rights ***

  If you desire to publish this article in a PRINT 
  publication, you must contact the author directly 
  for Print Permission at:  
  mailto:[email protected]



.....................................

If you need help converting this text article for proper 
hyperlinked placement in your webpage, please use this 
free tool:  http://thephantomwriters.com/link-builder.pl

Would you like to learn how to improve the performance of your
article marketing campaigns? Download our F.R.E.E. 108-page
Article Marketing Ebook at: 
http://thephantomwriters.com/ebooks/advanced-article-marketing.html


*****************************************************************
*
* This email is being delivered directly to members of the group:
* 
*    [email protected]
* 
*****************************************************************


=====================================================================

ABOUT THIS ARTICLE SUBMISSION

http://thePhantomWriters.com/ is a paid article distribution 
service. thePhantomWriters.com and Article-Distribution.com 
are owned and operated by:

Bill Platt
3010 E Raintree
Stillwater, Oklahoma USA 74074


Learn more about our article distribution services by visiting:
http://thephantomwriters.com/x.pl/tpw/info/article-distribution/index.html

The content of this article is solely the property 
and opinion of its author, Peter Gopal, Ph.D.
http://www.visionary-management.com/



---------------------------------------------------------------------
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
---------------------------------------------------------------------





Reply via email to