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Practice
Information
1. Parents of children younger than 3 are
permitted to accompany their children into
the treatment area. However, parents of
children 3 years and older are required to
remain in the reception area for ALL visits
unless otherwise instructed. Dentistry for
children is exacting and requires the
undivided attention of the child and the
dentist. It is very important that we get to
know your child as quickly as possible with
as little diversion as possible. Most
children react much more favorably under
these conditions. You will be called into
the treatment area when appointments are
completed. Please feel free to ask questions
at this time.
2. Generally, on your first visit with us,
we will examine your child's mouth, clean
the teeth, do a fluoride treatment, and make
radiographs necessary to detect decay,
infections of the bone, or evaluate growth.
We will discuss your child's dental needs
and will outline the treatment plan for your
child. At subsequent appointments, your
child will receive the dental care indicated
by his examination and diagnosis.
3. We will make a diagnosis and prescribe
dental treatment based on your child's needs
and current conditions. We do not base
treatment recommendations on dental
insurance, third party benefits, or other
limitations you may have. Our obligation is
to provide the best care available for your
child. Financial assistance through
insurance that may be available to you is
between you and your insurance company, and
has no bearing on the treatment that we
prescribe for your child, or the fees
involved in performing that care.
4. Please try not to be upset if your child
cries. This is a normal reaction to fear,
and we are trained to help fearful children
through their dental experience. When
describing their visit, please do not use
words such as needle, shot, drill, pull, or
words suggesting unpleasantness. We will
treat your child as our own, and perform the
dental service in the easiest way possible.
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Scheduling
Policy
Children under the age of six, and patients
requiring longer appointments, extractions,
fillings, or other difficult procedures are
scheduled in the morning only. We reserve
afternoon hours for older student checkups
to minimize their missing school. However,
since it is impossible to see all school age
patients after school, we appreciate your
understanding and cooperation. Any patient
who misses two consecutive appointments
without 24 hour notice will be dismissed
from the practice.
What about
finances?
Payment for
professional services is due at the time
dental treatment is provided. Every effort
will be made to provide a treatment plan
which fits your timetable and budget, and
gives your child the best possible care. We
accept cash, personal checks, debit cards
and most major credit cards.
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Our Office Policy Regarding Dental Insurance
If we have
received all of your insurance information
on the day of the appointment, we will be
happy to file your claim for you. You must
be familiar with your insurance benefits, as
we will collect from you the estimated
amount insurance is not expected to pay. By
law your insurance company is required to
pay each claim within 30 days of receipt. We
file all insurance electronically, so your
insurance company will receive each claim
within days of the treatment. You are
responsible for any balance on your account
after 30 days, whether insurance has paid or
not. If you have not paid your balance
within 60 days a re-billing fee of 1.5% will
be added to your account each month until
paid. We will be glad to send a refund to
you if your insurance pays us.
PLEASE
UNDERSTAND that we file dental insurance as
a courtesy to our patients. We do not have a
contract with your insurance company, only
you do. We are not responsible for how your
insurance company handles its claims or for
what benefits they pay on a claim. We can
only assist you in estimating your portion
of the cost of treatment. We at no time
guarantee what your insurance will or will
not do with each claim. We also can not be
responsible for any errors in filing your
insurance. Once again, we file claims as a
courtesy to you.
Fact 1 -
NO INSURANCE PAYS 100% OF ALL PROCEDURES
Dental insurance is meant to be an aid in
receiving dental care. Many patients think
that their insurance pays 90%-100% of all
dental fees. This is not true! Most plans
only pay between 50%-80% of the average
total fee. Some pay more, some pay less. The
percentage paid is usually determined by how
much you or your employer has paid for
coverage, or the type of contract your
employer has set up with the insurance
company.
Fact 2 -
BENEFITS ARE NOT DETERMINED BY OUR OFFICE
You may have noticed that sometimes your
dental insurer reimburses you or the dentist
at a lower rate than the dentist's actual
fee. Frequently, insurance companies state
that the reimbursement was reduced because
your dentist's fee has exceeded the usual,
customary, or reasonable fee ("UCR") used by
the company.
A statement
such as this gives the impression that any
fee greater than the amount paid by the
insurance company is unreasonable, or well
above what most dentists in the area charge
for a certain service. This can be very
misleading and simply is not accurate.
Insurance
companies set their own schedules, and each
company uses a different set of fees they
consider allowable. These allowable fees may
vary widely, because each company collects
fee information from claims it processes.
The insurance company then takes this data
and arbitrarily chooses a level they call
the "allowable" UCR Fee. Frequently, this
data can be three to five years old and
these "allowable" fees are set by the
insurance company so they can make a net
20%-30% profit.
Unfortunately, insurance companies imply
that your dentist is "overcharging", rather
than say that they are "underpaying", or
that their benefits are low. In general, the
less expensive insurance policy will use a
lower usual, customary, or reasonable (UCR)
figure.
Fact 3 -
DEDUCTIBLES & CO-PAYMENTS MUST BE CONSIDERED
When estimating dental benefits,
deductibles and percentages must be
considered. To illustrate, assume the fee
for service is $150.00. Assuming that the
insurance company allows $150.00 as its
usual and customary (UCR) fee, we can figure
out what benefits will be paid. First a
deductible (paid by you), on average $50, is
subtracted, leaving $100.00. The plan then
pays 80% for this particular procedure. The
insurance company will then pay 80% of
$100.00, or $80.00. Out of a $150.00 fee
they will pay an estimated $80.00 leaving a
remaining portion of $70.00 (to be paid by
the patient). Of course, if the UCR is less
than $150.00 or your plan pays only at 50%
then the insurance benefits will also be
significantly less.
MOST
IMPORTANTLY, please keep us informed of any
insurance changes such as policy name,
insurance company address, or a change of
employment.
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New Patient Form
For your convenience prior to visiting our office, please
click on the link below to print the New Patient Health History
Form, complete the information and
bring it with you to your first visit.

To print the form you will need Adobe Acrobat Reader. If
you do not have Adobe Acrobat, please
click
here to download it for free to
your computer.
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