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Dental Consulting | Are You Setting the Right Goals?

By: admin

July 5, 2018

Oregon Dental Coach

No matter how effective you are at vision casting, dreams require hard work and strategic planning to become a reality. Highly successful business owners know the benefits of setting realistic and measurable goals. Rethink the way you are setting goals for your business. Your ambitious plans will be successful only if you have a road map to reach them. By mastering the art of setting incremental, measurable goals, you’ll be able to more effectively to reach them. For more tips on managing your practice, contact our firm today.

 

Plan out the steps, not just the big picture.

Start small by establishing smaller goals on a quarterly, monthly, or even daily basis. It can be easy to let ambition take over and lose track of the work required to reach your ultimate objective. Setting smaller, incremental goals provides the opportunity for you to celebrate the small victories along the journey and reassess early if something isn’t working.

 

Measure your success.

How will you know if you achieved your goal if you cannot measure it? Goals should have a measurable standard. Perhaps you want to see 5 more new patients each month or to increase the number of referrals by 50%. Set specific goals that are easy to track. This will help you to definitively know whether or not you’ve reached them and, if not, have a tangible metric of how much you still need to accomplish.

 

Make your goals visible.

The more visible your goals are, the greater pressure you’ll feel to meet them. Make sure everyone in your practice is aware of what you’re trying to achieve. This will not only ensure that they’re actively helping you reach your goals, but will also provide a source of accountability to hold you to your word. Putting up visual reminders can also be a simple way to accomplish a similar effect. The more you’re reminded of your goal, the more likely you are to work towards it.

 

Real growth doesn’t happen passively. In order to take your practice to the next level, you need to set goals to help you get there. Whether these goals are financial, patient-oriented, or focused on personal development, we’re here to help. Contact us today to learn more!

Dental Practice Solutions
(888) 816-1511

Posted in Blog

Dental Consultant | Building a Better Team

By: admin

June 28, 2018

Oregon Dental Consultant

Recruiting employees can be a time-consuming, stressful, and sometimes costly endeavor. When you’re looking to build an optimal team, it can be tempting to hold onto old employees for too long and hesitate to hire new ones until you’re confident you’ve found the “perfect” fit. However, both of these common mistakes can be damaging to the efficiency and culture of your business in the long term. Building an ideal team can take time, but keeping the following tips in mind can help ensure your business is able to thrive.

Out with the old…

It can be hard to let go of any employee. Ideally, everyone you bring to your business will become a valuable member of the team. Unfortunately, that’s not always going to be the case. If an employee is displaying any of the following signs, it might be time to consider letting them go:

  • Bad Attitude: This includes eye-rolling, snide comments, complaints, confrontational tone, and passive-aggressive speech or actions. An employee that disrespects their co-workers won’t have the best interests of the team or the business at heart.
  • Lack of Engagement: Whether unfocused at work or unresponsive during meetings, an employee that’s not mentally present can’t give their best to their work.
  • Dishonesty: Whether this involves refusal to accept accountability, blaming others for mistakes, or outright lies, dishonesty is harmful to your business and your team.
  • Poor Performance: While it’s expected that an employee in a new role may need an adjustment period, if that employee shows an ongoing inability to grow professionally or meet the expectations of their position, it might be a harbinger of even bigger problems down the road.

In with the new…

Whether you’re looking to replace current employees or meet the demands of a growing business, you want to do everything you can to make sure you’re hiring the right people for your team. Here are some tips that can help streamline the hiring process:

  • There’s No Such Thing as Perfect: When looking to bring in new employees, it can be tempting to wait until you’ve found the “perfect” fit. However, that can unnecessarily slow down the process and cause you to skip over individuals who might become great assets for your team in time. Keep in mind that a good employee is one that grows and performs well, and look for individuals that possess the qualities needed to thrive long-term.
  • Follow Your Gut: Instincts exist for a reason. If something about a prospective employee isn’t sitting right with you, it could be a sign that there’s a deeper problem you’ll have to address in the future. While you shouldn’t necessarily make quick decisions on feelings alone, it’s worthwhile to take them into account.
  • Listen to Your Team: The members of your staff will often be able to offer good insights into how the company can grow. Whether a trusted employee is revealing the poor performance of a co-worker or a team is asking for another member to help manage their growing responsibilities, it’s worth seeking their input when making decisions.

Though there’s no exact science to building a successful team, there are proven strategies you can use to help the process be as painless as possible. By holding current employees to a clearer standard and exercising discernment with new and prospective employees, you can make the hiring process operate more smoothly and increase the overall productivity and happiness of your team.

For more advice on building a better team and managing your practice growth, contact our office.

 

Dental Practice Solutions
(888) 816-1511

Posted in Blog

Dental Coaching | A Thief In Your Dental Office. What Will You Do? Are You In Compliance?

By: admin

April 19, 2018

Guest Blog Written by: Shawn M. Lindsay, Esq

Last fall, a small local doctor’s office was robbed. During the lunch hour, while staff members were in the back office, a thief walked into the doctor’s copy room and stole a laptop containing protected health information (PHI). Eight months and $20,000 later, the good doctor narrowly avoided a possible $1.5 million governmental fine.

In the healthcare compliance system, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office for Civil Rights (OCR) is both the referee and governing body.

Once the OCR received a report that the doctor’s laptop was stolen, they came marching in to conduct an inquiry. The OCR asked for:

  • A formal written description of the event;
  • Evidence of corrective action taken by the doctor’s office;
  • Documentation of mitigation steps taken;
  • A copy of the doctor’s policies and procedures to safeguard PHI;
  • Copies of any risk analyses assessing potential threats and vulnerabilities to the office’s PHI;
  • Documentation showing the office had implemented security measures sufficient to reduce risks;
  • Documentation showing the office had implemented a mechanism to encrypt and decrypt electronic PHI;
  • Confirmation of whether the theft was reported to the OCR’s web portal; and
  • Many other weighty requests.

Unfortunately, the doctor only had a hand-me-down notice of privacy policies that staffers routinely gave to new patients. That was it. Nothing else. Risk Analysis? Encryption? Mitigation? Security measures? OCR web portal? The doctor had no idea what any of that meant.

 

Consequently, the doctor had to retain legal counsel and an information security expert to build and implement — retroactively — new policies, procedures and practices that were compliant with HIPAA’s privacy rule, breach notification rule, and security rule. These professionals also assisted the doctor with the careful response and communications to the OCR. Thankfully, the doctor’s retroactive (and very expensive) efforts helped him avoid the fine. The OCR is typically not so lenient. He also narrowly avoided having to notify more than a few thousand patients, which would have been a significant expense and likely embarrassment. The national average for notification and credit monitoring is $214 per patient.

The OCR has very publicly announced that it is picking up its audit program and will begin a new round of audits starting soon. Healthcare professionals need to be prepared by not only understanding, but by meeting privacy, security and breach notification requirements. Pleading ignorance is not a defense when the OCR calls.

The doctor in this account could have completely avoided all the time, expense, and financial risk had he:

  • Spent a few hours to implement written privacy, security and breach notification policies and procedures; and
  • Implemented some simple security measures, such as encryption

Every practitioner should recognize the seriousness of compliance and the OCR. As a result, we have prepared and are making available a template of policies and procedures for you to use in your practice. We can also refer you to professionals who will provide tips and actionable items to help you win compliance and protect your practice.

 

 

 

 

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shawn M. Lindsay, Esq., partner at Harris Berne Christensen LLP. Mr. Lindsay is a skilled business and intellectual property attorney. He is also a former member of the Oregon State House of Representatives.

Shawn’s experience includes representing clients in the following areas: software and commercial licensing; establishing, acquiring, transferring, and preserving intellectual property rights; business entity formation and structuring; business transitions and successions; mergers and acquisitions; privacy and security; HIPAA compliance; and government relations. Shawn is one of the few attorneys in Oregon who has passed the International Association of Privacy Professionals’ (“IAPP”) Certified Information Privacy Professional/United States (“CIPP/US”) exam.

You can reach Mr. Lindsay at 503-968- 1475 or shawn@hbclawyers.com.

Posted in Blog

Got Profits? 10 Facts of the Matter.

By: admin

March 27, 2012

The Dental Hygiene Department needs to be and should be the 2nd highest profit center in your dental practice. Imagine this now! Possibly, when you see the words “INCREASE and PROFITS” together, you see a treadmill where high volume and financial reward are the main focus of the dental hygiene department. I hope you see quality patient-centered care when you put the words increase and profits together in the same sentence. These 2 words can be congruent with operating the successful systems in your dental practice.

A Paradigm Shift

During the twenty-first century, the goal of helping our patients has now progressed from treating infection to providing good health. It is very important that your team understand the cost of running a dental practice. It is when the team understands the financial aspects of a dental practice that the members of the dental team will be committed to excellence. It is important to have team meetings to educate every team member of the cost associated with the daily operations of running the business of dentistry and dental hygiene. One important time to deliver this information is the morning team-huddle.

The Facts

The fact is, the hygiene department is the second largest profit center in the dental practice and provides support for the practice as a whole. Within the hygiene department are several other areas of profitability for the dental practice.

Most of your patients spend one hour–two to possibly four times a year with the dental hygienist(s) and because of this ongoing relationship patients are more likely to remain committed to your practice, accept treatment recommendations and refer patients to your dental office. This makes your dental hygiene department a business within a business and it makes the dental hygiene executive in this department held accountable for the success. When the dental hygienist is held accountable for the department success and when he/she understands the vision and principles of the dental practice, success will follow. You will find the team working in harmony when they understand the vision for the practice, share the same code of patient ethics and take ownership for the way patients are treated.

When every team member takes ownership of their role in the dental practice the patients are sure to experience a caring attitude, a superior dental experience, the highest level of care and the profits are certain to follow. This is what creates a win-win situation.

One of the most important aspects of the dental hygiene treatment that is often overlooked is the list of assessments. Dental hygienists feel as if they are on a treadmill but when the team plans the day effectively these assessments can really make the day run smoothly, allow patients to feel they received the highest level of care and now allows for a more comprehensive treatment plan to occur. The treatment plan now moves to a higher level of care. Profits will follow.

New Treatment Heights

There are approximately 10 assessments that stimulate profitability in the dental hygiene department. These ten are all important aspects of the patients’ oral and total health. Not all offices participate in this list of 10 and this is where untapped potential can be easily missing.

If you take a look at the list below and notice a missing piece choose to just implement 1 or 2 within the next month. Make an appointment this month to discuss with your team how to implement these ten successfully into the dental hygiene patient appointment time. Be patient with these changes and take time to discuss how to effectively implement these with full participation from the entire team.

The most overlooked assessments are the annual full-mouth periodontal screening exam. Still in the 21st century many hygienists who see a patient every six months, neglect to pick up a periodontal probe prior to picking up a curette. Most dental offices assessed during an initial consultation for practice management services, are found to have approximately 15% of their adult patients lacking early intervention and preventive procedures for periodontal disease. If each of these patients continues down this path we know that research states this disease process will continue and the patient will at some point experience tooth mobility and most likely tooth loss.

When disease goes untreated, imagine what this will cost the dental practice? Take into account that most non-surgical periodontal treatment plans are approximately $1,000.00 for four quadrants of just scaling and root planing not taking into account the use of antimicrobials or laser therapy. Now take into account the frequency of the periodontal maintenance appointments that follow about every 90 days.

Once a periodontal patient, always a periodontal patient. It is the same as a patient with diabetes or high blood pressure. These patients are seen frequently and always at risk for future disease even after the disease has been halted. These diseases are all episodic. We are not talking about the almighty dollar but a gain of our patients’ overall health!

Another new area of treatment that is overlooked at this time is the pediatric patient – first visit. CAMBRA is a new evidence-based protocol for assessing caries. It is now the standard of care for the pediatric patient to have their first visit when the first primary tooth erupts. This appointment can be done in a consult room with the child seated on the mothers lap. This is an appointment to assess the tooth structure, biofilm and any suspicious areas of the child’s oral cavity. If you are concerned about receiving payment the CDT codes have you covered.

How many patients qualify for this preventive measure? How will this benefit your patients and your bottom line?

When the dental hygienist and team all understand the need to prevent and intervene at an early stage vs. wait and watch; not only does the patient gain an improved level of health but the dental hygiene production will automatically increase. Establish periodontal and the various preventive protocols today. Now is the time to cease treating the periodontal patient with a prophy appointment and begin to utilize the
preventive measures according to the new CAMBRA guidelines.

Another area in dentistry that has changed in the past decade or more is selling home care products. Many decades ago we wrote a prescription or sent our patients to a pharmacy with names of products written on a piece of paper. Our knowledge and research over the past few decades states that 70% of these patients returned to our dental office and never took time to get the prescription filled. Patients seldom took that piece of paper with them to purchase the specific product recommended. When patients have the toothbrush they are to use and shown in the dental office how to use that new power toothbrush they are more likely to use the brush effectively.

This is the one area of your dental practice that has a net profit of about a 70%. You can spend hours preparing a crown or bridge and you have lab fees to pay at the end. The ROI (return on investment) for home care products sold in the dental office is about 70%. We want patients to buy their home care products from the experts, the people who know which toothpaste, toothbrush, mouth rinse, etc. is appropriate for each individual patient to use at home. The sales person at the local drug store and even the pharmacist is not the person to educate a patient about xylitol and its benefits, let alone what type of silica is appropriate to use on the expensive restorations the dental patient just paid for.

By engaging and empowering the entire team your dental business is certain to excel. You will create a cohesive team and a dental practice based on patient-centered care, excellence and the extraordinary. Realizing your potential for the dental hygiene team and creating a thriving profit center inside this valuable department of your business is essential to building the dental practice you have always dreamed of. This assures you long-term relationships along side your success.

Your team and the dental hygiene department are all very important assets to the health, profitability and success of the dental practice.

The 10 FACTS for Profitability:

  1. Perform oral health care assessments that include the review of patients’ health history, dental charting, oral cancer screening, periodontal assessments, biofilm assessment, saliva pH test, smile analysis, xerostomia, etc.
  2. Expose and interpret dental radiographs (x-rays); co-diagnose
  3. Non-surgical periodontal procedures, antimicrobial agents, laser therapy, etc.
  4. CAMBRA
  5. Apply cavity-preventive agents such as fluorides varnish and sealants to the teeth;
  6. Administer local anesthetic and / or nitrous oxide analgesia;
  7. Educate patients on proper oral hygiene techniques to maintain healthy teeth and gums and recommend home care products
  8. Discuss whitening treatment and take impressions when applicable
  9. Administer smoking cessation programs; and
  10. Counsel patients on the importance of good nutrition for maintaining

Debra Seidel-Bittke, RDH, BS is founder of Dental Practice Solutions a full-service dental consulting, coaching and speaking business. Ms Seidel-Bittke is considered a leader in the field of dental hygiene and named one of Dentistry Today’s top consultants. Dental Practice Solutions is focused on increasing the profitability of your dental practice quickly through 4 areas of the dental hygiene department. Research and technological advances have created more opportunities to deliver a higher level of non-surgical periodontal care. An important component of any successful dental business is the function and profitability of the dental hygiene department.

Posted in News

One Simple Step to Success for 2010

By: admin

December 8, 2009

Crossing out Plan A and writing Plan B on a blackboard.Do you have a strategic plan for your dental business in 2010? Most businesses that don’t have a plan fail to become successful. Don’t enter into a new decade blindly…make sure you have a plan.

Have you ever heard the saying “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail”? Well this holds true for your dental business as well. You can not start a business and proceed blindly and just expect that everything will work out and you will achieve great success. It rarely will happen that way. Each year, in the very beginning of each year you need to sit down outside the regular dental office atmosphere and make a plan. This plan needs to include the entire team. It starts your practice off on the “right tooth”. Well, it is one way to keep you in the black.

Don’t set yourself up for failure

Without a plan you won’t know which way to progress, you won’t know what you need to do or where you should be when the day begins; let alone another year ends. The entire team will be confused about what you are working towards. What happens next? What happens in most cases is a loss of focus on the interest of the business of dentistry and loss of motivation to get where you need to go.

Would you take a journey somewhere you’ve never traveled without a road map? Of course you wouldn’t. Not if you want to successfully reach your destination. In the year 2010 you most likely have a sophisticated device such as a GPS to guide you directly to your destination.

Considering this, do you think you could successfully reach the goal in your dental business without a strategic plan?

If you are going to put your time and money into something, you don’t want to set yourself up for failure; rather you want to ensure your success.

Have an annual plan to ensure your success

When you have a plan, you will create direction for yourself and the entire team who follows your lead. You will now understand what you need to accomplish your tasks and move to the next step.

You don’t have to do this on your own. As the year ends many consulting/business firms are offering discounts to guide you to plan effectively, to travel in the right direction and end at the pot of gold.

Once you have a plan in place, you won’t have to guess what you should do next, as you will already know. You won’t spend your time wondering and waiting for success to come, only to be disappointed and clueless as to where you went wrong. I’m not saying that just any business strategic plan is going to ensure you success, but having a plan in place will significantly improve your chances!

Be prepared
This is your business…your lively hood. Having a well thought out business plan will also reduce your stress as you move along.

If you’ve ever been a parent or a babysitter of a young infant or toddler, you will know that if you go on an outing with a carefully packed diaper bag, you will feel a lot less stressed than if you just threw some things together right before you left. What if you forgot something? What if you forgot something important like diapers, bottles for formula, or the baby food?

While you are away trying to enjoy yourself your mind may constantly be stressed, trying to think if you have forgotten anything. Not a good way to run an outing at the park… or your business. Find yourself some business plan opportunities and get started!

Have all your cards in place and you will give yourself the best chance possible to be successful.

January is almost here and if you don’t have your annual strategic planning meeting on the calendar, now is the time to schedule that for you and the entire team. I want to suggest that it be held outside of your office. Make it a fun event for the entire team. There needs to be an organized agenda but make it fun, be concise and yet directive about what needs to be accomplished. Be sure to address what has been accomplished in the past year and decade as well.(Remember we begin a new decade on January 1, 2010!!) At this important meeting make it known to the team when you plan to have the office closed in 2010, holidays for the office, vacation requests and annual review dates for each team member need to be set or suggested at the least. This is just a short list to get you started on the “right tooth” when 2010 begins.

“If you don’t know where you are going; any road can take you there. Be sure to have your map in hand as you begin 2010!”

Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!
May you have a happy, healthy and prosperous 2010!

Posted in Business

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