> I’m always shocked when I get a treatment plant after 5 minutes that outlines exactly what the dentist needs to do, how much insurance will pay, and how much I will need to pay.
What you don't know (unless you get 2nd/3rd/4th opinions from good dentists) is how necessary those truly are. Some dentists just work around things by recommending things you don't need. (Fill teeth, taking panorex, etc. unnecessarily)
I asked my new dentist why her recommendations were so different from her predecessor.
She said that there's not always one "correct" treatment. Some dentists will try to nip potential problems in the bud, lest they get worse. Others have more of a wait-and-see attitude which can avoid some procedures but make others worse.
Doctors, plumbers, builders, and mechanics all do the same thing. Do you replace the brake pads now, while the wheels are off anyway, or do you squeeze another season out of them since there's still a bit left? Rebuild the whole deck, or maybe just replace the more banged up boards and wobbly railing?
Difference being is all break pads eventually wear out and need to be replaced and all decks need regular maintenance. Not all teeth are going to eventually need work.
Plus the huge disparity in recommended treatments is an indication some are just throwing shit at the wall to see what sticks:
>Studies that explicitly focus on overtreatment in dentistry are rare, but a recent field experiment provides some clues about its pervasiveness. A team of researchers at ETH Zurich, a Swiss university, asked a volunteer patient with three tiny, shallow cavities to visit 180 randomly selected dentists in Zurich. The Swiss Dental Guidelines state that such minor cavities do not require fillings; rather, the dentist should monitor the decay and encourage the patient to brush regularly, which can reverse the damage. Despite this, 50 of the 180 dentists suggested unnecessary treatment. Their recommendations were incongruous: Collectively, the overzealous dentists singled out 13 different teeth for drilling; each advised one to six fillings. Similarly, in an investigation for Reader’s Digest, the writer William Ecenbarger visited 50 dentists in 28 states in the U.S. and received prescriptions ranging from a single crown to a full-mouth reconstruction, with the price tag starting at about $500 and going up to nearly $30,000.
I consistently tell my dentist to make treatment decisions as if this were her mouth/teeth. Of course, I'll never know if that gives her a license to "go profitable" over "go optimal", but I'm also extremely unlikely to go chase multiple opinions over a cracked tooth or filling.
That's because most common dental procedures are relatively straightforward and the mechanical processes of the mouth are relatively well understood compared to most of the rest of the body. Plus most dental procedures are elective in the sense that you can usually just have an offending tooth pulled if it gets too bad, so for most people there's a price ceiling that is much lower than say a lifesaving heart procedure.
Why can't a hospital tell me how much an xray costs then? If I come in with a broken arm, why can't they tell me how much it will cost to get it xrayed yet the dentist can do the exact same thing with a broken tooth?
A dentist office is more comparable to an urgent care clinic than a hospital. And in many cases an urgent care clinic can tell you what simple procedures will cost. There are imaging services companies that can tell you upfront how much diagnostic tests are going to cost as well.
A broken tooth is a much less complex injury than a broken arm. In many cases you don't even need to be a dentist to diagnose it. Try walking into a dentist office with a more complex injury that could involve multiple different dental specialties and severe underlying complications. You aren't going to get an immediate upfront price.
1. Dental x-rays are more straightforward and involve fewer people, so the price is easier to calculate.
2. Dental x-rays are more often than not elective procedures. It's much easier to comparison shop elective procedures than emergency procedures. Therefore market forces frequently compel the dentist to come up with an up front cost for an x-ray.
The same market forces don't apply to hospitals because you can't wait a week or more while you shop around for treatment for a shattered hip.
What you don't know (unless you get 2nd/3rd/4th opinions from good dentists) is how necessary those truly are. Some dentists just work around things by recommending things you don't need. (Fill teeth, taking panorex, etc. unnecessarily)