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The Future of Dentistry
The Future of Dentistry

The Future of DentistryWord Count: 368

Advances in dental research have caused the discipline to branch off into a number of subspecialties, with one specialty almost encroaching on medical science. The branching off can be mainly attributed to advances in procedures.

The procedures that somehow made dentistry and medicine meet can be seen in the oral and maxillofacial surgery field. This specialized field deals with treatment and operations in the face that can include the neck, head and jaw, and can include some procedures that are dental in scope but whose cure could only be accomplished in a medical fashion, through surgery.

Some dental issues that can only be resolved through surgery include bone grafting, difficult cases of impacted teeth and some extractions, and some corrective cases for temporomandibular joint pain. But a lot of the procedures involved in cosmetic dentistry are increasingly encroaching on surgery, begging the question of whether dentists should have to go through increased training to practice their profession.

In an affluent area like Chattanooga, Tennessee, it is only natural for patients to expect the highest possible expertise from their dental service provider. Yet, it is a question of markets. There should be a division of the market such that simple services can be accommodated by a dentist with a certain kind of training and complicated dental procedures can be left to those who have had significant training. It is a matter of cost that prompts such division of the market to be proposed.

In instances where the nature of the case is periodontic, Chattanooga patients can rely on dentists who have completed two or more specialty training to have the assurance that the care provider would deliver on promised services.

Restricted by the scope of their training as a periodontist, Chattanooga dental professionals would do well to just advance their training as far as possible. Well and good if the market division remains steady, but in a market like that of Chattanooga, the more likely scenario would be that the market would require a more upscale kind of service.

For a periodontist, Chattanooga would need more than just the treatment of gum diseases. The requests by patients probably would be for services that are of aesthetic and cosmetic nature.




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