Managing Patients: The Patient Experience Guidelines for Pratctice Success. American Dental Association
of eligibility and benefits by: ______________________________________________________
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Deductible amount:$_______________
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Does deductible apply to preventive services?
Determine frequency of preventive services:
Date of last radiographs: ___________________________________________________________________
Prior tooth loss restrictions: _________________________________________________________________
Any other restrictions or limitations: __________________________________________________________
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© ADA 2015. Reproduction of this material by ADA member dentists and their staff is permitted. Any other use, duplication or distribution by any other party requires the prior written approval of the American Dental Association. This material is educational only, does not constitute legal advice, and may not satisfy applicable state law. Changes in applicable laws or regulations may require revision. Contact a qualified lawyer or professional for legal or professional advice.
Office Hours and Time Management
Every patient deserves the best care you can offer. While it might be tempting to schedule as many patients as possible, the goal of effective time management is to achieve a workable balance between quality and quantity. While a full schedule may be appealing, over-scheduling could make you feel pressure to rush through appointments. The quantity of dentistry can never outweigh the quality. Compromising the quality of patient care could risk the viability of your practice.
Try to match your office hours to the times the majority of your patients are able to come in. Consider evening or weekend hours if an analysis of your patients’ availability finds that many, if not most, need appointments during those hours.
• Consider your patients’ demographics and availability when setting your office hours and schedule.
• If patient demand warrants, you may want to consider adding an associate to the practice in order to accommodate patients’ availability.
Offer evening and weekend appointments if possible to help schedule patients with limited availability.
Open communication and a good working relationship with your team members who schedule appointments can keep patients moving in and out of the practice smoothly and at optimum production levels.
• Let your team members who schedule appointments know your preferences, such as whether you prefer to perform certain procedures on certain days of the week or at certain times of the day.
Develop a plan for educating your team about how you want the schedule to flow and for resolving scheduling conflicts that might arise.
• Determine how much daily practice time should be devoted to consultative, diagnostic and clinical work.
• Leave time open daily for emergency appointments.
Review your schedule each morning and talk with your scheduler about the best time slot for emergency patients.
• Accept and acknowledge that unavoidable delays sometimes cause you to run behind schedule.
When that happens, your staff should apologize to any patients kept waiting. They should not offer a vague statement such as “the doctor is very busy.” Your patients expect you to be busy. They’re busy too, and they want their appointments kept in sync with their schedules. You should also offer an apology to any patient kept waiting more than a few minutes and consider mailing a letter of apology directly from the dentist to any patient who has had to wait more than 20 minutes recognizing the importance of their time. While it takes some time and effort, that patient will appreciate the extra effort and attention. It can also help overcome any frustration the patient may have experienced.
Reception Area and Office Décor
Your office décor communicates your attitude towards patients, your philosophy of dental practice, and maybe even a little about your interests outside of the practice. Since this is a new patient’s first real contact with you, take a moment to see it through their eyes.