Better living through dentistry
Nov. 1st, 2007 12:43 pmI'm registered with the only dentist within about 25 miles who claimed to take new NHS patients.
They did a checkup and an xray, and a few days after the xray they phoned to tell me that I needed a filling. (Bummer, thought I, I nearly made it to 30 without needing any fillings.)
So I went in for the filling, and when I was on the chair with my mouth propped open they asked if I wanted the NHS filling (mercury filling, lots of drilling under anaesthetic, painful, unsightly grey lump in the tooth, cost = £45) or the private filling (non-mercury, very little drilling, painless, invisible, cost = £70). I opted for the invisible/painless option, which took about 5 seconds of drilling and 2 seconds of holding some kind of instrument against my tooth (I'd been told to close my eyes so I have no idea what).
After that was done, the dentist showed me the xray and said that there was another 'shadow' visible on the xray and I might need another filling. "It's only a very slight shadow, you probably won't even be able to see it," they told me, pointing at a completely blank bit of xray. They were right. They took another xray from a different angle and said they'd phone me back if anything showed up.
Surprise surprise, they reckon I need to pay them another £70. This feels like a phenomenal ripoff; for all I know, they are inventing these 'fillings' out of thin air. They can't provide any evidence except a blank space on an xray where they claim to be able to see something. Now obviously being able to spot things that mere mortals wouldn't spot on a postage-stamp-sized xray is the sort of thing that one might get from 7+ years of training to be a dentist. But they're certainly not inspiring me with confidence.
The 'drilling' is apparently only a tiny bit (no pun intended) on the surface of the tooth, so the 'filling' must only be the merest cat's whisker of the dental equivalent of polyfilla. I've always taken the view that teeth are worth protecting; but, if I was being completely cynical, I would point out that it is hardly rocket science to work out that people of my age a) were probably brought up to take this view of toothcare, b) probably feel slightly guilty about not brushing seven times a day and not using all the available tooth-cleaning technology, so can probably be persuaded that the fault is theirs, and c) have a reasonable amount of disposable cash.
I don't think there's any way I can get a second opinion without paying outrageous amounts of cash to some other private dentist; there simply are no NHS dentists in the area (and of course you still have to pay for checkups even on the NHS). Of course, they know that, too.
But if I just told them I didn't want to have it done, then a) they'd kick me off their books (they'll only take NHS patients in the first place if their teeth are okay) and b) I'd feel as though my teeth were a ticking time bomb in my mouth. Maybe £140 isn't too much to pay for peace of mind. But it still leaves me feeling as though my mouth is full of snake-oil.
They did a checkup and an xray, and a few days after the xray they phoned to tell me that I needed a filling. (Bummer, thought I, I nearly made it to 30 without needing any fillings.)
So I went in for the filling, and when I was on the chair with my mouth propped open they asked if I wanted the NHS filling (mercury filling, lots of drilling under anaesthetic, painful, unsightly grey lump in the tooth, cost = £45) or the private filling (non-mercury, very little drilling, painless, invisible, cost = £70). I opted for the invisible/painless option, which took about 5 seconds of drilling and 2 seconds of holding some kind of instrument against my tooth (I'd been told to close my eyes so I have no idea what).
After that was done, the dentist showed me the xray and said that there was another 'shadow' visible on the xray and I might need another filling. "It's only a very slight shadow, you probably won't even be able to see it," they told me, pointing at a completely blank bit of xray. They were right. They took another xray from a different angle and said they'd phone me back if anything showed up.
Surprise surprise, they reckon I need to pay them another £70. This feels like a phenomenal ripoff; for all I know, they are inventing these 'fillings' out of thin air. They can't provide any evidence except a blank space on an xray where they claim to be able to see something. Now obviously being able to spot things that mere mortals wouldn't spot on a postage-stamp-sized xray is the sort of thing that one might get from 7+ years of training to be a dentist. But they're certainly not inspiring me with confidence.
The 'drilling' is apparently only a tiny bit (no pun intended) on the surface of the tooth, so the 'filling' must only be the merest cat's whisker of the dental equivalent of polyfilla. I've always taken the view that teeth are worth protecting; but, if I was being completely cynical, I would point out that it is hardly rocket science to work out that people of my age a) were probably brought up to take this view of toothcare, b) probably feel slightly guilty about not brushing seven times a day and not using all the available tooth-cleaning technology, so can probably be persuaded that the fault is theirs, and c) have a reasonable amount of disposable cash.
I don't think there's any way I can get a second opinion without paying outrageous amounts of cash to some other private dentist; there simply are no NHS dentists in the area (and of course you still have to pay for checkups even on the NHS). Of course, they know that, too.
But if I just told them I didn't want to have it done, then a) they'd kick me off their books (they'll only take NHS patients in the first place if their teeth are okay) and b) I'd feel as though my teeth were a ticking time bomb in my mouth. Maybe £140 isn't too much to pay for peace of mind. But it still leaves me feeling as though my mouth is full of snake-oil.
no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 01:55 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 01:59 pm (UTC)Saying that I'm lucky in that I have a wonderful sensible dentist who has been dealing with my teeth since I was five, and even when they got bashed in (I swam into a wall) he said "oh, they're not going to fall out or anything, as long as you don't mind if they're a bit wonky". But he does tell me when something *does* need doing, such as "your wisdom teeth are growing sideways, that's why they hurt, let's take them out." He moved his practice to Hounslow when I was about 13, and on my first visit to the new dentist I was told I needed four teeth out & braces & whatnot, all costing £££. My mum and I told the new dude where he could shove his braces and have been going all the way to Hounslow for check-ups ever since. I don't know what I'm going to do when he retires. :(
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Date: 2007-11-01 02:17 pm (UTC)I've long been convinced that dentists often stir (or make) up more trouble than good, though.
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Date: 2007-11-01 02:21 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 02:26 pm (UTC)And though they're private he's not charged that much for either of the two fillings I just had, and they're bigger than yours.
(Mind you check-up, x-ray, temp filling, 2 real fillings, and some serious scaling under anaesthetic, over 5 sessions in total has come to 210 quid - but then I hadn't been in 5 years! The emergency appointment when I had a sudden excruciating pain after the second filling was free, though it mostly went away on its own and he just applied some fluoride goo which apparently makes teeth less sensitive.)
I suddenly wonder if you can get macro lenses for x-ray machines so they can make the picture bigger, but I suspect it doesn't work like that.
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Date: 2007-11-01 02:32 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 02:42 pm (UTC)Straight line optics. You've got to love it.
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Date: 2007-11-01 02:50 pm (UTC)I would also think about calling up the NHS and ask their advice - I expect there is someone you *can* call to ask this sort of thing - and tell them that you feel you're being had, and what about it, then?
caveat: i grew up with exclusively private dentistry so I'm conditioned to expect high charges, and the best advice i ever heard about finding a good dentist was "ask the rabbit who HE goes to"... that said, I like my dentist and do trust him. Dr. Jensen.
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Date: 2007-11-01 02:53 pm (UTC)Smaller pixels on the X-ray detector would be a better approach to magnification, but then you'd need a brighter X-ray source, and a longer exposure, and more risk of bad health effects from X-ray exposure.
If only flesh were more transparent, or teeth more reliably opaque.
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Date: 2007-11-01 02:57 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 03:03 pm (UTC)As far as dentistry goes, a short while back my dentist (although not his practice) stopped doing NHS treatment. Rather than switch to one of his junior colleagues, I went private. It's costing me £40 (IIRC) for an annual check-up rather than £15 for an NHS 6-monthly one. If your teeth are in good health, and you're not in an exempt category, I really don't see the advantages to NHS dentistry.
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Date: 2007-11-01 03:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 03:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 03:09 pm (UTC)And mirrors. Hmm.
Metamaterials are seriously weird, I'll grant you that.
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Date: 2007-11-01 03:22 pm (UTC)My mother seems to have a fetish for dental work: they're always extracting this, crowning that, filling the other. When I was seventeen I went to her dentist and he said I needed four fillings. The first filling gave me toothache for nine months when I'd previously never had any, so I skipped the other three fillings.
Seven years later I summoned up the courage to see a dentist of my own choosing and find out what the damage was: he gave me a quick scrape and polish and said everything was OK! Things continued OK for another five years until finally my dentist suggested fissure seals and I accepted. That was several years ago.
The moral of the story is that dentists can be wrong, or at the very least wildly overzealous. In my case I've now gone nineteen years without those allegedly-essential fillings. I still have only one filling, and it was almost certainly counterproductive.
Incidentally, I had the fissure seals on the NHS.
It might be worth seeking a second opinion, or even just asking your current dentist what will happen if you leave the tooth for the time being. Once you're on their books, I'm not sure they can delete you at whim: if they're going to try deleting you for rejecting necessary treatment they'd better be very sure the NHS would agree on behalf of the taxpayer that it was necessary.
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Date: 2007-11-01 03:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 03:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 03:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 04:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 04:24 pm (UTC)I have never had a sensible dentist. :( I had one who insisted on taking all my milk teeth out to make room for the other teeth (okay slight exaggeration but I have had TWELVE AND A HALF TEETH OUT in my life) and have had several who've been, y'know, meh. Okay but nothing great.
If I had a sensible dentist I would move in with them, I think.
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Date: 2007-11-01 04:25 pm (UTC)Yep, that's the ones I'm with. :-/
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Date: 2007-11-01 04:30 pm (UTC)Nah but since they're only in it to make money I suspect they'd have no truck with people who won't do what they say (ie pay money). Maybe I am maligning them. They don't give any kind of indication of it being a choice, though.
I will see if anybody will give me a second opinion. Temple Cowley is a bit of a bugger to get to from Botley (which is a shame because personal recommendations are a Good Thing) but I will see if anybody recommends anybody nearer home/work.
I don't object to high charges per se, in principle -- I mean, they're doing a skilled job, using expensive materials -- but if I'm going to shell out 70 quid for something I can't see/feel, then I want quite a lot more confidence that I'm not just buying skyhooks!
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Date: 2007-11-01 04:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 04:33 pm (UTC)That's a good plan & I might try it -- thanks!
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Date: 2007-11-01 04:51 pm (UTC)You can refract X-Rays. Or rather, appear to: one of those odd bits of economically-useless research that shouldn't be funded turned up a very peculiar type of lens in horseshoe crabs' eyes. It's an array of tubes - much like fibre-optic cables - acting as beam guides by total internal reflection off their inner surfaces.
The central guide is straight, and they become increasingly curved towards the edge of the 'lens' (picture a longitudinal slice through an onion, or take a column of parallel straws and press it down, so that the outermost straws bow outwards in a barrel shape). The geometry for off-axis incident rays at is quite complex but it can indeed focus an image from a narrow cone of vision.
If this structure can be reproduced at nanometre scales (say, in a distorted crystal) there's a way of focusing X-Rays for high-definition lithography, a topic of interest to Intel and AMD. I know of no attempts to put this discovery to work in medical imaging.
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Date: 2007-11-01 05:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 05:32 pm (UTC)I used to live in Eynsham. Seems like bloody long way for a dentist but I have real white coat syndrome and the dentist at this lot was the first one who was gentle, kind, would talk me though everything she was going to do. So for me it was worth the hassle of the journey. Can see why it wouldn't suit others though.
They are in theTemple Cowley shopping centre which is on the two of the bus routes you can pick up from Carfax - 7 and 10 I *think*.
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Date: 2007-11-01 05:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-11-01 10:26 pm (UTC)As A said, we signed up with the one in Kidlington, but I've never been, due to procrastination. Must sort that out soon. Will let you know if they're good, although obviously a long schlepp for you.
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Date: 2007-11-02 06:26 pm (UTC)You didn't have a written and signed estimate provided before treatment.
You were misled reagrding what the NHS solution and the private solution actually are.
The treatment was explained to you incorrectly
If they asked you to close your eyes then you were likely not properly kitted out with suitable eye protection - a breach of H&S.
To suddenly "find" another cavity, AFTER you had chosen the private option, when on initial radiograph assessment they had only seen one, means they had not examined the radiographs correctly.
No doubt you were given the legally required FP17DC form clearly outlining what treatment is NHS and which is private and giving you all your rights etc.
No doubt you were informed that both fillings on the NHS would be covered by the NHS quoted fee whereas privately you have to pay for each item.
The concept of "taking you off their books" implied "registration". This concept has now gone for ever. If you ring them up next week they are not obliged to see you at all if they are "at capacity" unless it involves a situation regarding a duty of care ie it related to something they have done previously. The new procedure is you ring the PCT and they allocate you to a dentist who has available slots. If none of them have then you go on a waiting list.
My advice, abandon the NHS find a reasonably priced private dentist. Expect to pay about 30.00 for a check up, 30.00 for scale and polish and 30.00 - 45.00 for normal fillings and more for white fillings. If you have a very healthy mouth - which it sounds like you do, it will likely be cheaper in the long (and probably short) run.
All the above IMHO and based on your post being true.
cheers
J