Why Dental Patients Have A Cleaning Mindset & What We Can Learn From Starbucks

How Starbucks Language Changes Mindsets 


In 2007, I decided to write a book on how assisted hygiene would work in a dental practice, titled “Just a Cleaning? Breakthrough Methods to Maximize Patient Care and the Bottom Line”. My hope was to begin a movement in our profession by extinguishing those first 3 words.
Fast forward to 2016, where I witnessed a local commercial encouraging viewers to call the practice for their “cleaning”. Yes, the struggle for all that legally encompasses your dental hygiene visit is very real.
There are 3 reasons your patients and consumers continue to have this mindset:

1. You Are Responsible For What You Teach Your Patients

Why do your patients believe it is just a cleaning? Do they know all that is encompassed in the dental hygiene visit? Could they list what is accomplished other than x-rays, scraping, and polishing teeth?
You and your team are responsible for what you teach your patients. When it comes to the valuable services you are providing them with, it’s up to you to educate them.

Think of it this way: do you remember your first time in Starbucks? They taught you their language when it came to the size of your drink. And if you said small, medium, or large, the barista confirmed your choice with their language – tall, grande, or venti. They taught us their culture.


Years later, what do we say when we order either at Starbucks or another coffee shop?  You can do the same thing in your practice by communicating clearly with your patients on what you are doing, why you are doing it, and what the benefit will be for them.

      2. Your Message Must Be Clear 

What words or actions reflect the service your dental hygiene team provides your patients? Consider health, wellness and prevention.
Even if you are not taking blood pressure, consider discussing additional health conditions that are not on the health history template such as:

1) Potential dangers of e-cigs/vaping and hookah sessions
2) HPV vaccine AND discussing HPV as a risk factor for oral cancer
3) Note medications for heart disease, diabetes AND discussing that link to gum disease, a chronic infection without a cure
4) Ask about food allergies and discuss gluten free oral hygiene products
5) Share nutrition choices from sugar in juice boxes to food/beverages that increase caries risk for infants, children to adults for additional concerns being enamel erosion.
6) Make recommendations for an oral hygiene fitness program by dispensing oral hygiene products you believe in from toothpaste, toothbrushes to mouth rinses that target bad breath. 

When your message is clear, you dissolve their fear for joining you on the the highway to health!

 3. You are treating it as “just a cleaning”

What is accomplished in the 60 minute hygiene appointment? Do your patients feel like a number? Have you asked them? If the hygiene visit is a quick assembly line it is a drive thru service whose message is to actively choose to ignore the existence of chronic diseases, side effects of lifestyle choices or health conditions and more. 
Be relentless in your communication to emphasize the added value you provide them, infuse current news from your publications or CE programs. All patients deserve to know.

          Personally, I believe the word for a dental hygiene visit is wellness. Think I’m crazy?

I challenge you to go to Twitter and hash tag two words. #teethcleaning and #wellness.It won’t take you long to realize which word unleashes the value of health or abundance of areas oral health is linked.


This exercise may be the first step to share with your team and your patients in understanding why the meaning of a dental hygiene visit spans far beyond a “cleaning”. 

Take What You Learn & Make A Difference With It!
Anastasia


Original blog posted Safco Dental Supply








5 Things To Know About YOUR Oral Cancer Screening


Understand that conversations about the risk factors for oral cancer may feel uncomfortable for both patients and their dental hygienists.

Avoiding uncomfortable conversations about risk factors doesn’t save lives. Click To Tweet! 

It isn’t just cigarette smoking. Dig deeper and ask about e-cigs, hookah, cigar smoking lifestyle choices. 
HPV is a sexually transmitted disease. It is a lifestyle risk factor. Your patients deserve to know this AND what symptoms to notice in their mouth. 
Now that the initial conversation has begun, the next 3 actions are where training proves the most valuable.

Think of it as an extra-oral + intra-oral Tour de Tissue screening for health that may save your life.

Interested in a PDF  “5 actions” check list to take to your dental professional  click here
Take What You Learn & Make A Difference With It!
Anastasia

5 Health Reasons For Chapped Lips

Climate changes contribute to dry, flaky, chapped lips! This can be so sore depending on the location! If it is around the corner of your lips, it makes opening your mouth to eat a painful experience! And what is the ONE thing most of us continue to do in effort to “feel” a sense of relief? We lick our lips! 


Saliva has digestive enzymes … which have zero impact in moisturizing our lips! I know this and yes … still do it! 


View what 5 health reasons can cause chapped lips & what lip balms to consider! 

Do you have a lip balm that you have found helpful to protect your pout? Comment and share! So we can …. Take What You Learn & Make A Difference With It


Anastasia
www.AnastasiaTurchetta.com

Cervical Cancer, HPV, Oral Cancer: Education Is A Conversation

Education begins with a conversation. Cervical cancer survival rates have improved dramatically in the past 3 decades. Oral cancer has not. Why?


I believe an alliance must be formed by OBGYN and their team with dentists and their team in effort to save their patient’s lives. HPV is a risk factor for cervical cancer and oral cancer. What I find perplexing is how much resistance there is to have a discussion about prevention, risks and ask for screenings that can identify the current state of health. Early detection saves lives. Click this link for CDC facts on cervical cancer and HPV screening

View how a conversation can be started on this week’s vide blog; ask your dental hygienist about oral cancer screenings via technology and how HPV is a risk factor. 
It isn’t about sex; it’s about cancer.  


Subscribe, comment, share this information! 

Take What You Learn & Make A Difference With It

Anastasia




Why You Should Visit Your Dental Hygienist During Pregnancy!

Recently, a viewer asked about whether she should see her dental hygienist or not during her pregnancy. This week I answer that question in the video below!


At least 70% of women who are pregnant experiencing bleeding gums, tooth sensitivity or a toothache. Many will not seek help from a dental professional. If anything, this is the time to take THE best care of you! The current state of health in your mouth will impact your baby. 


Here’s what you may not know about how your dental hygienist can be YOUR health advocate alongside your OBGYN during this amazing journey! 


Your dental hygienist is licensed to co-diagnose and/or treat pregnancy gingivitis, gum disease, pregnancy granuloma, enamel erosion, dentin hypersensitivity, dry mouth, nutritionally guide you during morning sickness, inform you on what to look for regarding your baby being tongue tied, making breast feeding frustrating, painful and malnourishing to your child. Plan for laser treatment to release the tongue tie and guide you and your child with orofacial myofunctional therapy exercises. 


I’m truly surprised how dental hygienists are still viewed at as “cleaning ladies”in 2016 and hope this week’s video shares some insight on our commitment to guide you to health! 

Thanks for viewing!
Anastasia

www.AnastasiaTurchetta.com
Take What You Learn & Make A Difference With It