NEW Complex Treatment Planning

Develop a system to optimize your patient care experience.

Complex Treatment Planning Pro Tips

Medical History — Significant Findings

  • “Do I need to dismiss?” → contagious / imminent emergency
  • “Does my patient need antibiotic prophylaxis?”
    • Cardiac health
    • Immunocompromised
  • “What emergency do I need to prepare for?”

Pt. Chief Concern

TipPatients are motivated by one of two things.

(1) Moving toward pleasure
(2) Moving away from pain

Identify Concern Physically

  • Intraoral / extraoral compulsory evaluation
  • Note extent of missing teeth and prosthetic work
  • Calculate appropriate radiographs

ALARA Radiographs

TipInitial exams are critical for rapport.

There’s a fine balance between listening to and following the direction of the patient. The trust you build on day one is the foundation of every appointment that follows.

Document Radiographic Findings

  • Radiographs are a critical diagnostic tool
  • However, a diagnosis can’t be made from radiographs alone — it still requires a thorough clinical exam
  • Create a list of findings that need further investigation during the clinical exam

Periodontal Exam

  • Full-mouth periodontal probing
  • Note mobility
  • Note gingival margin
  • Note crown-to-root ratio
  • Diagnose a prognosis for each tooth
TipFraming context for your patient is key.
  • You need to spend time evaluating your findings
  • Most complex plans take more than one visit

Intra-oral / Extra-oral Exam

  • Evaluate every tooth and surface, and document it
  • Document existing conditions
  • Document all hard- and soft-tissue findings
  • Test any teeth with suspicious pulpal or periodontal involvement
  • Let radiographs guide your exam
  • Take intraoral / extraoral “face time” photos for aesthetic cases

Study Models / Scans

  • Bite registration (mounted or unmounted)
  • Facebow
  • Mount on an articulator
  • CBCT
  • Articulation software

Synthesize Data

  • Develop 2–3 treatment plans, max
  • Plan around the patient’s responsibility / financial capacity
  • Anticipate common questions on complex procedures and prepare concise answers

Patient Presentation

  • Remember patient motivators — speak their language
  • Use clean, attractive models
  • Discuss priorities — keep long-term care in mind
TipSpeak to your patient at equal eye level.
  • Match and Mirror body language
  • Use transitional language
  • Ask whether they prefer the “big picture” or the details

Always Schedule the Next Appointment Before the Patient Leaves the Office

  • Every patient leaves with an appointment scheduled
  • Confirm their preferred method of contact
  • Outline your appointment / cancellation policy
  • Offer a discount for pre-payment
TipWatch your scheduling language.

Avoid “Do you want to schedule…?”
Try “When would you like to…?”

If patient says “I’ll call you,”
Try “We book up, so let me hold a spot for you — when you call, we can always adjust it.”

Deliver What You Promise

Treatment Planning Map

More Education

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Emergency Diagnosis

80% of the emergency diagnosis comes from the story. Get an accurate story. Find the right questions to ask.

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