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4. •
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•
•
•
Introduction
Winds of Change
Changing Scenario
Management styles in dental practice
Orthodontic Office design
• Paper less practice
• Financial consideration
• Physical consideration
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•
•
•
•
Ethics
Patient incentive and motivation
Fees & Payments
Orthodontic support team and Associate
Partnership
Relation with general dentist
Practice acquisition and transition
Preventing loss
Retirement
Conclusion
www.indiandentalacademy.com
References
5. INTRODUCTION
• Dentistry :a health care profession
• Two fold role :
– to provide health care & service
– to make profit as a small business.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
DCNA 1988
6. WINDS OF CHANGE
Metamorphosis of the
DENTAL practice
TRADITIONAL TO NEW
•
•
•
Challenges faced
Art and Science to Business
New questions and new answers
www.indiandentalacademy.com DCNA 1988 & JCO 2002,03,04,06
7. Challenges posed to today’s dentist
When did dentistry seem to become
a business first and an art and
science second?
Why is the practice of dentistry so
exquisitely sensitive to every type of
fluctuation in the market place?
What is responsible for all these
changes?
www.indiandentalacademy.com DCNA 1988 & JCO 2002,03,04,06
8. SERVICE v/s BUSINESS
• As a health care service: dentistry provides
quality care for the patient, following
standards of care established by government
agencies and the profession itself.
• As a business: an enterprise in which one is
engaged to achieve a livelihood, be
productive & create a profit.
www.indiandentalacademy.com DCNA 1988 & JCO 2002,03,04,06
9. Preferred future through informed choice
• Today’s patients will seek optimal services
from orthodontists who understands and
accommodates their expectations,
• Whereas those patients with low
expectations will have their requirements
satisfied by a provider equipped with to
process large nos. of people.
www.indiandentalacademy.com DCNA 1988 & JCO 2002,03,04,06
10. •CAPTAINS of their fate must
understand the sociological
evolution
•If they are to chart an
appropriate course for their
professional contributions:by
accepting that changes are
occurring they can prepare
themselves and their practices
from the segment of the
population they choose to serve
www.indiandentalacademy.com DCNA 1988 & JCO 2002,03,04,06
11. CHANGING SCENARIO
Up to 1940s:
Solo practice
one-on-one relationship
relatively low key, low pressure, and momentarily
rewarding
level of dental sophistication
free to charge
1950 -60 :
consumer demand
Population increases and a greater desire
Technical advances
www.indiandentalacademy.com
DCNA 1988
12. 1960-70‟s:
“GOLDEN YEARS” of dentistry
Loss of control on patients
emergence of third party
indemnity insurance concept
Mid 1970‟s:
Patients were hard hit
effect of a mini-recession
Manufacturers faced layoffs
excessive no. of graduates
fighting for survival :ERA OF COMPETATION
Closed panel capitation plans
www.indiandentalacademy.com
DCNA 1988
13. Late 1970s and Early 1980s:
proliferation of group practices
Department stores and franchise
business began
Through 1980s and 90’s
Alternate service providers emerged
like CPO, prepayment plans and
capitation plans
Department of health maintenance
organizations (HMO)
Closed panel with staff and group
model practice and Individual
practice models.
The 21st century
change in insurance scheme
advanced technologies
Demanding conscious consumers
DCNA 1988
www.indiandentalacademy.com
14. Management styles in dental practices
• Leadership: vital to communication.
• Authorative management
• Free rein management
• Participatory management
AJODO 2004
www.indiandentalacademy.com
15. Establishing practice goals and objectives
•
•
•
•
•
•
Develop a practice philosophy
Develop practice objectives
Develop procedural policies
Develop business principles
Develop a practice standard
Develop a staff recognition programme
AJODO 2004
www.indiandentalacademy.com
16. Desirable characteristics for building
relationships: Big Business
•
•
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Self confidence
Genuineness
Openness to experience
Acceptance of others
background and values
Enthusiasm
Assertiveness
Integrity
Effective listening
Recognition of other needs
Sense of turnover
www.indiandentalacademy.com
AJODO 2004
17. ORTHODONTIC OFFICE DESIGN
• SITE PLANNING:
• Office Location
• Areas demographics
• Price of land and overall
cost of the project
• Legal restrictions
• Landscape and greenery
• Type of building
• Parking space
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
18. “TODAYS PRACTICE” - The Paperless Practice
• Difficulty in keeping tract of patient files and
treatment records.
• Demographic (patient information forms)
• Diagnostic (health histories, photographs, models, xrays)
• Treatment (charts, plans, notes)
• Scheduling (appointment book)
• Financial (ledger cards)
• Increase practice efficiency
• computerized practice management program
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
19. Computer technology and HIPAA
• Health Information Privacy and
Accountability Act (HIPAA)
:influenced the way we gather and
maintain patient data on computers
and thus have had an impact on the
office environment.
• Office Designs must now
incorporate physical and technical
barriers, as well as administrative
safeguards, to protect the security
of patients personal health
www.indiandentalacademy.com
JCO 2003
information
20. • Ancillary tools
•
•
•
•
•
Imaging and cephalometrics
insurance – benefits data bases, credit reporting
Scanning,
Inventory and Electronic ordering,
CD-ROM systems for patient education, case
presentations, and staff training, prediction, etc
www.indiandentalacademy.com
JCO 2003
21. Financial considerations
• Investment in hardware
and software
• The system selected
• Size of the practice
• Paperless practice should
cost 2-5% of gross income
• Investment based to
increase efficiency alone.
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
22. Physical considerations
• Office Design:
• “Work patterns determine the floor plan”
• Location and no. of work stations:
– Front desk
– Financial / business areas
– Key areas throughout the operatory
– Chair side units
– Satellite offices
– Doctor’s home
• Location of main sever
• Record storage:
• Storage space
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
23. Reception Desk
• Contemporary style :completely open to
the reception room. Helps create a friendly
atmosphere.
• Open desk with prefabricated fiberglass
victratex sound panels on the walls behind
it to mute conversations between patients
and the secretary.
• Computer terminal for appointments, and
accounts maintenance.
JCO 2001
www.indiandentalacademy.com
24. Examination room
• First visit to the orthodontic office
• Initial impression is critical to case acceptance
• Ambience and design of the examination room
• warm atmosphere and décor go a long way
toward establishing a comfort zone for both
parents and patients.
• Set ups
• Smaller and newer
• Well established
• location and design of the exam/consult room
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
25. Exam/consultation room
• designed with enough flexibility
• used as an exam room, a treatment
coordinator work area, and a
consultation room
• room in the 150 – square – foot
range
• imaging system and photography
section, impression area, etc
• seating for patient and parents
www.indiandentalacademy.com
JCO 2000 & 2002
26. Business office/Doctor’s private office
• used for education as well as to
motivate patients in a semiprivate
environment
• Payments
• Review records of a difficult case on
the computer before the patients
visit
• The doctor to conduct a confidential
huddle with the staff about sensitive
information during treatment
(HIPAA factor) or to meet with the
treatment coordinator about a
difficult case before the consultation
www.indiandentalacademy.com
JCO 2000 & 2002
27. Operatory Design
“site of real action”
• “Visual Privacy” and
preferably sound proof
• A rear-delivery cabinet with a
mounted computer
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
28. Chair side cabinetry and delivery system
• ambidexterity of the operator
• rear-delivery systems to avoid
this potential problem
• Four hand practice.
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
29. • Chair side utility centers
• Central islands
• Sterilization centers
:preferable in the most
visible part of the clinic
: due to public concern
STERILIZATION UNIT
SINK
ULTRASOUND
www.indiandentalacademy.com
JCO 1988, 2000 & 2002
AUTOCLAVE
UV LIGHT
30. Working Area
• Primary work triangle formed by
the operator, the assistant and the
primary work area (tray)
• Secondary work triangle based
on the location of sinks, secondary
storage, and mixing areas
• For easy traffic flow of patients.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
JCO 2000 & 2002
31. • “individual non-stress tempos”
• At busy times :doctors and assistant
can step up their „cadence a notch‟,
but it is not desirable or healthy to
work that way for extended periods
of time.
• Experience :the most efficient way
to handle the volume of patients
DCNA 1988
www.indiandentalacademy.com
32. Arrangement of dental chairs
• Save or Waste valuable space
in an operatory
• Comfort zone where patients
feel they have their own
territory
• Traditional parallel or radial
designs
• Circular or pinwheel chair
arrangements
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
33. Clinical Time
•
•
•
•
•
•
upgrading and rearranging the equipment
Procedures and techniques selected.
Working position
Four hand practice
Newer technology
Placement of instruments and equipments in
the primary working area.
JCO 2000 & 2002
www.indiandentalacademy.com
34. •
•
ETHICS IN ORTHODONTIC PRACTICE
Non-payment of treatment fees
Breach in Contract or agreement
1. informed verbally as well as in
writing about the delinquency
of the account / missing
appointments/ breakages
2. see the patient at regularly
schedule maintenance
appointments to monitor the
integrity of the braces as well
as the oral hygiene
3. removal of the braces, or
suggest that they find
another practice.
JCO 1999
www.indiandentalacademy.com
35. • Offer a limited treatment option
– as long as it doesn’t leave the patient in a
more compromised relation, but it is
unethical to do a limited treatment that
could have a detrimental effect
– try to convince the patient
– Plan for all alternative treatment options
along with the level of compromise expected.
• Dr. Birdwell
– “It is ethical to offer a less-than-ideal
treatment because of finances, as long as
the limited treatment leaves the patient in
better dental health.”
JCO 1999
www.indiandentalacademy.com
36. Change in Fees
• work, material, time and quality of care,
advertising and marketing
• “The orthodontist didn’t create the
system. He is just trying to survive in
it.”
–Dr. Schudy
JCO 1999
www.indiandentalacademy.com
37. • Charge different fees for the same
service ?
• If the same work, material, time and quality of
care are to be offered it would be taking
advantage of the full fee patient to reduce one‟s
fee for the managed care patient
• Should one Reduce his Fee if treatment
finished early ?
• Doctor patient relationship?
JCO 1999
www.indiandentalacademy.com
38. Getting to your patient: Psychological Motivation
“People act to satisfy their own needs and desires, not the
needs of other people. People behave to satisfy their real
motives, not the motives they should have.”
- A N Shoonmaker
• When reasons and emotions clash, emotions
almost always wins.
• In getting a patient to move in the direction of
better health, one need to appreciate the
powers of emotional appeal and have certain
attitudes, values and feelings our self.
• Building up a trust that makes it possible to
sense our patient‟s real desires.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
39. PATIENT INCENTIVE AND
MOTIVATION
• Patient behavior through positive
reinforcement for decades
• Rewards such as T-shirts, stickers, fastfood coupons, and movie passes have been
used to recognize good oral hygiene,
headgear and elastic wear, and on-time
appointment keeping
• marketing strategy
www.indiandentalacademy.com
40. • To be effective, motivation must be internalized
• Rah-rah speeches usually fall on deaf ears
• patient with low self-esteem – the typical noncomplaint patient
freedom to choose
STIMULUS
RESPONSE
•Office environment
•Monitoring the treatment progress
•Nonwww.indiandentalacademy.compatient.
cooperative
41. Positive v/s negative reinforcements
•
•
•
•
Positive is always better
Changing the attitude
Office environment and staff concern
Parents and peer group
www.indiandentalacademy.com
42. Orthodontic support team / Associates
• Doctor and his associates, older patients, parents, etc are its
members
• Older members are used to motivate the newer members of
the same group.
• They make reminder calls for headgear wear, elastic wear,
removable appliance usage, and oral hygiene.
• Advantages include
» One-to-one peer contact
» Sharing of experiences and practical information
» Mutual problem solving
» Social interaction
www.indiandentalacademy.com
43. Staff development
• maintain staff longevity
• continuing education and cross-training
• Job satisfaction and level of professionalism
of staff members by giving them the
opportunity to utilize their intellectual as
well as technical skills
• better caregiver, communicator, and practice
builder.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
44. Staff models
•Individual practice:
•Doctor, Receptionist/ clerk/ assistant/
technician, etc
•Visiting other specialists
•Assistant lower qualification doctors
• Group Practice:
• Multi specialty care center
• Many highly qualified
doctors working together
• Paid Associates and Un-Paid
Partners
• separate working areas and a
bigger set up
• Separate Assistants,
receptionists, technicians,
hygienists, etc
www.indiandentalacademy.com
45. Patient communications
• “Communication is the KEY to
success.”
• The orthodontist can only speak to
one patient and parent at a time,
• But staff members can greatly
expand the distribution of
important messages about practice
philosophies, procedures, and
special features.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
46. Paradigm of Motivation
• Primary motivational techniques
orthodontists use - for encouraging
patients to assist in their treatments
• Three main psychological disciplines.
• Humanism, existentialism, or Maslow’s
Third Force techniques.
• Psychoanalytical techniques developed by
Freud
• Behaviorism
» positive reinforces
» negative reinforces
» punishment.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
47. • Do not expect all patients to do things for your
benefit.
• Most patients, except for the deranged and totally
altruistic, do things that benefit themselves.
• So when people do have the skill but not the will
to do something, look for the following
conditions.
– rewarding to perform as desired.
– punishing to perform as desired.
– simply doesn‟t matter whether performance is as
desired.
– Identify and remove the obstacles in performance.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
48. Child orthodontic patient
• Gives children a first-hand, experiential, and
interactive lesson in dentistry and orthodontics.
• Involvement in a worth while community
service.
• Alleviates fears about dental care.
• Familiarizes people with the specialty.
• Introduces to a great number of potential
patients
• Allows to market our practice and the services
provided in a professional manner.
• Newer learning experience
www.indiandentalacademy.com
49. NINE CONGENITAL TEMPERAMENTS
THAT MAKE CHILDREN EASY OR
DIFFICULT TO MANAGE
Trait
Easy child
Difficult child
Activity
Low
High
Distraction
Low
High
Regularity
Regular
Irregular
Approachability
Approaches
Withdraws
Adaptability
Good
Poor
Persistence
Low
High
Mood
Positive
Negative
Sensitivity
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Insensitivity
Sensitive
50. TURTLES WITHOUT SHELLS
• Behaviors associated with non-complaint
orthodontic patients :
– poor oral hygiene, chronic complaining, easily
fatigued jaw muscles, inability to open their
mouths wide, copious salivation, frequently
broken appliances, refusal to use permissive
appliances, easily provoked gag reflexes,
chronic mouth ulcers, TMD symptoms, and
frequent missed appointments
www.indiandentalacademy.com
51. • Low profile hyper reactive children:
– show little inclination to tolerate the demands,
discomfort, and inconvenience of orthodontic
therapy
– broken brackets and bands result from when
they touch, tug on, and damage the appliances
that are discomforting them .
– They cut the wires with nail cutters or wire
cutter.
– break the offending brackets by biting on a
pencil, pen, or block of ice
www.indiandentalacademy.com
52. FEES AND PAYMENTS
• Economic success & profitability.
• Economic equation : costs and fees
• Fixing the fee for service provided.
• Cost benefit ratio:
INCOME V/S SKILL, EXPERTISE, EQUIPMENTS, TIME
www.indiandentalacademy.com
53. Payment schemes
• Direct to doctor
• Via insurance company
• Patient to doctor and then patient claim from
insurance providers.
• Free service
• Robin hood practice.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
54. • Knowledge and Experience
• Cost-per time analysis of the fee-for-service
approach
• Internal audit of the following variables:
–
–
–
–
–
–
Number of dental chairs
Hours per week the office is normally open
Weeks per year the office is closed
Net income forecast
Indirect cost factors
Percentage of occupation of dental chairs
Direct measurement
Approximation
www.indiandentalacademy.com
55. How do people choose an orthodontist ?
• Referral from their
dentist
• Recommendations
from friends and
relatives
• Media
www.indiandentalacademy.com
56. Key to patient attraction
• Initial phone call
– Patients form an immediate impression of the
dentist and his practice before ever meeting or
seeing the office
• Art and Science of the initial phone call:
– Art: the way of talking and expressing your
gratitude and concern for the patient.
– Science: the information to be gathered and
information to be imparted
• The staff member answering the initial call
must have a very pleasing and welcoming
voice andwww.indiandentalacademy.com
must sound interesting.
57. Pre appointment phone call:
to Obtain essential information
1. First and last names of the
patient and both parents
2. Addresses of the patient
3. Phone numbers
4. Patient’s Date of Birth
5. The dentist or other person
who referred the patient
www.indiandentalacademy.com
58. THE PERFECT ASSOCIATE:
COLLEAGUE
• The doctor usually spends an increasing amount
of time at the chair treating patients
• Time spent on marketing; with family ,
vacations etc… gets shorter.
• Issues in finding a perfect associate:
• differences in treatment philosophies, competition between
the doctors, money issues, etc.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
59. OLDER ASSOCIATE
• A fresh outlook and avoiding burnout of the
practice.
• experienced and confident
• No Ego hang-ups nor trying to change your
practice philosophy, nor leaving to set up a
competing practice.
• More focused on treatment and provide
exceptional patient care.
• Better holiday www.indiandentalacademy.com
and higher education planning.
60. PARTNERSHIPS
• Importance :
• expanding a practice.
• making the transition to
retirement.
• high cost of a bad decision / miss
diagnosis.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
61. SUCCESSFUL PARTNERSHIP
• A good fit between the personalities of the
partners.
• Similar values
• The ability to be team players
• Compatible goals
• Mutual trust & understanding
www.indiandentalacademy.com
62. Break Ups !
• The process of dissolution can take
months or years and often involves
litigation.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
63. RELATION WITH GENERAL DENTIST
Relationship :based on referrals
• Add new general dentist referral sources or to
maintain the loyalty of existing referrers .
• Internal marketing efforts
• METHODS OF ESTABLISHING RELATIONSHIPS :
• lunch meetings, office-to-office events,
gifts, set up study groups, memberships
www.indiandentalacademy.com
to various associations, etc.
64. PRACTICE ACQUISITION AND
TRANSITION
• Financing :
• Funds
• Self funded/Commercial bankers and loans
• Partnerships
• Fair-market value for the target practice
• After-tax cash-flow projections
• Debt and living expenses.
• Credit-worthiness of the purchaser
www.indiandentalacademy.com
65. Reasons for failure of practice acquisitions
1. legitimate personality conflicts
2. unforeseeable event
3. insufficient planning
•
Valuation of the practice, cash-flow, taxefficiency, legal, operational, and a myriad of
other concerns must be addressed before the
parties can proceed with confidence
www.indiandentalacademy.com
66. To sell or not to sell ?
• If the practice is of high or
moderate income in a highly
favorable or favorable location,
then the chances of selling are
extremely good
www.indiandentalacademy.com
67. Green = Go !
Transition Probability : excellent
Yellow = caution !
Transition probability : guarded
Red = Alert !
Transition probability : unlikely
www.indiandentalacademy.com
68. Strategy
• start looking for an associate / buyer at least
seven years prior to retirement
• Ample time to choose the best possible buyer.
• Higher the income, the better the chances of
selling
• improve the practice
www.indiandentalacademy.com
69. Every beginner wants to get into profitable
existing practice rather than starting a newer one
• Less risk.
• Guaranteed immediate income.
• Continue to build an already
thriving practice.
• work with a mentor.
• benefit from the good will already
established within the community by
the senior orthodontist.
• a high-quality facility that otherwise
would not be affordable for years.
• practice with a www.indiandentalacademy.com staff.
well-trained
70. PREVENTING LOSS
Why do so many orthodontists fall prey to embezzlers ?
• Leave the management duties to front-desk staffers
• No internal controls or periodic reviews
• Shortcut the hiring process
www.indiandentalacademy.com
71. Ten steps to protect the practice when
hiring an employee
•
•
•
•
•
•
Reclaim any office keys and building
passes from the terminated employee.
Change the office locks.
Revoke the employee‟s computer access,
and change passwords.
Change the burglar alarm code
Revoke any check-writing or other
financial authority.
Recover any practice credit cards or phone
cards.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
72. •
•
•
•
Have the employee remove all personal
belongings from the office and return all cell
phones, pagers, etc
If the employee has the power to order
supplies by phone, notify suppliers that it is
revoked.
Finalize all payrolls and benefit details. Give
the employee the last pay check. Although a
few states have no law governing how quickly
doctors must pay employees who quit, most
require that an employee receive the final pay
check by the next regular payday.
If severance pay will be provided, consider
having the employee sign a release form to
www.indiandentalacademy.com
protect your practice from liability
73. RETIREMENT
• 1999 JCO retirement survey :
• 92.9% = able to “afford a comfortable retirement”
• fewer than 15% of practicing orthodontists will have $4 million
or more in assets at retirement
NOT PREPARED TO RETIRE.
•
•
•
•
•
Divorce
poor investments
poor planning
limited saving
enjoy life today philosophy
“Not able to hang up their pliers and ride off into the sunset!”
www.indiandentalacademy.com
74. Strategies
Plan ahead
Seek professional assistance
Monitor your numbers
Maximize peak earning years
Develop both personal and practice
budgets
Increase practice income
Reduce practice expenses
Spend less than you make
Determine the investment rate of return
needed to reach your goals
Don‟t be greedy
Don‟t make foolish investment mistake
Plan to work longer
Make sure to sell the most valuable asset
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Protect the loved ones
75. • Always know the value of your
practice
• A practice coverage agreement in
case of death or disability
• The value of your practice decreases
quickly and dramatically if you are
unable to operate it
• The longer it can be kept running, the
better the chances that your loved
ones will be able to sell it and reap the
benefits of your years of hard work.
www.indiandentalacademy.com
76. • Insurance needs : Protect the loved ones
• Life insurance
• Liability insurance
• Home insurance
• Health insurance
• Long-term care
– Auto insurance
• Practice :
• Liability (Malpractice) insurance
• Office overhead insurance
www.indiandentalacademy.com
77. CONCLUSION
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
success in an orthodontic office
team effort
first, impression is the last impression
maintain a good rapport with the patient and
associates
Right fee for right work is our right.
Cost benefit analysis
Time for all aspects of life
Successful & comfortable retirement
www.indiandentalacademy.com
78. “Managing a practice is an art in
itself which everybody has to
master it so as to lead a
comfortable, satisfied life.”
www.indiandentalacademy.com
80. REFERENCES
1)
2)
3)
4)
5)
6)
7)
Hamula Warren (April 2003) “Orthodontic office design”.
Journal of Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXXVII, Number 4
: Page 213 – 216.
Hamula Warren (Oct 2003) “Orthodontic office design”.
Journal of Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXXVII, Number
10 : Page 533 – 540.
Iba Howard (July 2003) “Management and Marketing”.
“Orthodontic office design”. Journal of Clinical Orthodontics.
Volume XXXVII, Number 7 : Page 373 – 375.
Iba Howard (Sep 2003) “Management and Marketing”.
“Orthodontic office design”. Journal of Clinical Orthodontics.
Volume XXXVII, Number 9 : Page 485 – 489.
Iba Howard (Dec 2003) “Management and Marketing”.
“Orthodontic office design”. Journal of Clinical Orthodontics.
Volume XXXVII, Number 12 : Page 659 – 664.
Hamula Warren (Jan 2000) “Orthodontic office design”.
Journal of Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXXIV, Number 1
: Page 15 – 18
Gottlieb Eugene (March1999) “Ethics is orthodontic
practice”. Journal of Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXXIII ;
www.indiandentalacademy.com
Number 3 : page 145 – 150. .
81. 8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
Gottlieb Eugene (April 1999) “Ethics is orthodontic
practice”. Journal of Clinical Orthodontics. Volume
XXXIII ; Number 4 : page 221 – 223
Mayerson Melvin (March 1997) “Management and
Marketing”. “Orthodontic office design”. Journal of
Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXX, Number 12 : Page
153 – 162.
Mayerson Melvin (Sept 1997) “Management and
Marketing”. “Orthodontic office design”. Journal of
Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXXI, Number 9 : Page
613 – 617.
Mayerson Melvin (Dec 1997) “Management and
Marketing”. “Orthodontic office design”. Journal of
Clinical Orthodontics. Volume XXXI, Number 12 : Page
821 – 825.
Mayerson Melvin (Feb 1996) “Management and
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