Heart Your Smile

A great new campaign to change the public’s perception of dentistry. Headed up by  James Goolnik and launched at Dental Showcase it provides a Manifesto For Change with the 9 Habits of a Happy Dental Professional.

It’s overdue – well done to all involved.

Take a look at the website and sign up www.heartyoursmile.co.uk

Follow them on Twitter & like on Facebook.

Here’s the Manifesto:

 

NHS Pension Confusion – some clarification

During the past few weeks there has been a great deal of publicity and debate about changes to NHS pensions that came into force on November 7th. The BDA have been in discussion with the Department of Health and have issued some advice for members here.

Alan Suggett from accountants UNW has produced an excellent flow chart which I have tried to reproduce here. For the full version go to their website here.


The Monday Morning Quote #140

“The one important thing I have learned over the years is the difference between taking one’s work seriously and taking one’s self seriously.

The first is imperative and the second is disastrous.”

Margot Fonteyn

Blogging: Not for the get-rich-quick crowd – A great take from the Gaping Void

Regular readers of this blog will know that I am a great fan of Hugh “Gaping Void” MacLeod. He really gets the use (and sometimes the futility) of marketing and social media. This reminds me of the man lying on his death bed saying “I wish I had got another thousand twitter followers.”

Full post is here

Good news for orthodontists?

From Medical News Today www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/236859.php

Teeth Crowded In Seniors

The size of our jaws decreases with age. This is shown in a unique study from the Faculty of Dentistry at Malmö University that followed a cohort of dentists throughout their adult lives.

The unique study started in 1949. Plaster molds were made of the jaws of dental students, who were then in their twenties. Ten years later the procedure was repeated, and in 1989, forty years after the first moulds, a final round was performed. On that occasion the researchers were in touch with 18 of the original 30 participants.

“We found that over these forty years there was less and less room for teeth in the jaw,” says Lars Bondemark, professor of orthodontics, who analyzed the material together with his colleague Maria Nilner, professor of clinical bite physiology at the College of Dentistry, Malmö University .

This crowdedness comes from shrinkage of the jaw, primarily the lower jaw, both in length and width. While this is only a matter of a few millimeters, but it is enough to crowd the front teeth.

“We can also eliminate wisdom teeth as the cause, because even people who have no wisdom teeth have crowded front teeth.”

How much the jaw shrinks is individual, but for some patients the changes are sufficiently great for them to perceive that something is happening to their bite.

“In that case it’s good to know that this is normal,” says Lars Bondemark, who maintains that dentists need to take into consideration the continuous shrinking of the jaws when they plan to perform major bite constructions on their patients.

“We’re working against nature, and it’s hard to construct something that is completely stable.”

Why the jaws change throughout life is not known, but the magnitude of the change is probably determined by both hereditary and anatomical factors, including what the patient’s bite looks like.

The Monday Morning Quote #139

“People love to buy things, but almost no one wants to be sold.”

Thomas Leonard

The Monday Morning Quote #138

“Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.

So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbour. Catch the trade winds in your sails.

Explore. Dream. Discover.”

Mark Twain

CQC A letter to The Times

Published in The Times today. Well done Andrew.

Dear Sir,

For the Care Quality Commission to blame chasing of paperwork targets for the sad state of affairs in hospitals is brazen indeed, as it is the CQC, along with Primary Care Trusts and other “governance” and “compliance” organisations which have enforced the burdensome paperwork load in the first place. For my own profession of dentistry this has resulted in a virtual tsunami of un-necessary policy writing and compliance with innumerable pieces of micro-managing and verification of processes.

Despite what some might say, whose jobs depend upon it, not one jot of this massive effort has resulted in the health or welfare of my patients, my staff, or myself improving. It has however added to the already high costs of running a healthcare business or service. I would not be suprised in the least to learn that nurses have been taken off caring for people and put in front of computer screens and manilla folders. It seems that the more organisations are involved in so-called “regulation” or a service the worse the service becomes.

This government said it would slash red tape.

They lied.

Yours faithfully,

Andrew Adey BDS
Dental Surgeon,

The Monday Morning Quote #137 – from Sam for Sam

The Sams in question being Beckett & Warburton.

“Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.”

Worstward Ho 1983

Cymru