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		<title>Recession Proof Your Practice</title>
		<link>http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2009/02/25/recession-proof-your-practice/</link>
		<comments>http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2009/02/25/recession-proof-your-practice/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 25 Feb 2009 03:30:18 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[President Obama visited Ottawa this past week. Together with Prime Minister Harper, they vowed that the two nations would fight this recession together.
What started in 2008 as a housing crisis that was only to effect the US has spread to global proportions. And while Canada hasn’t been hit as hard as the US, we are still feeling [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>President Obama visited Ottawa this past week. Together with Prime Minister Harper, they vowed that the two nations would fight this recession together.</p>
<p>What started in 2008 as a housing crisis that was only to effect the US has spread to global proportions. And while Canada hasn’t been hit as hard as the US, we are still feeling the sting.</p>
<p>Slowly, dental offices are seeing decreased demand for cosmetic procedures. This trend is projected to continue until consumer confidence returns. Generally procedures covered by insurance and emergency work is expected to have the same demand.</p>
<p>Read here for more information on how to <a href="http://www.dentalproductsreport.com/articles/show/dpr0109_we_recession-proof" target="_blank">Recession Proof Your Practice</a></p>
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		<title>Words of wisdom for the new dental Assistant.</title>
		<link>http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2008/05/02/words-of-wisdom-for-the-new-dental-assistant/</link>
		<comments>http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2008/05/02/words-of-wisdom-for-the-new-dental-assistant/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 02 May 2008 01:15:23 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2008/04/02/words-of-wisdom-for-the-new-dental-assistant/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
So you&#8217;ve finally finished your dental assistant studies and it&#8217;s time to start your career.
There are many sources to find information on writing a killer resume. Ditto for interview skills and selling yourself. That information is a great help but I&#8217;m going to focus on what to look for in an office and what you [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img title="dental assistant" height="88" alt="dental assistant" src="http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/dentalassistant.thumbnail.JPG" width="134" align="top" /><br />
<span lang="EN">So you&#8217;ve finally finished your dental assistant studies and it&#8217;s time to start your career.<br />
There are many sources to find information on writing a killer resume. Ditto for interview skills and selling yourself. That information is a great help but I&#8217;m going to focus on what to look for in an office and what you may encounter in your new work environment.<br />
This is your first taste of working in a dental office aside from your practical placement. You must find some way to look past the excitement / fear of performing in a real office environment. Relax. Take a deep breath and know that with your technical training you will perform at the very least adequately. Hopefully you will have been placed with a staff that knows they have taken on a mentoring roll. You can name all the instruments and have a general idea of what each procedure involves but is it enough??  Most likely not at first but you learn and you adapt. A learning curve is expected. I know it&#8217;s easier said than done but don&#8217;t sweat it. You&#8217;ll find in your career that every office runs a little different and every dentist has a different style and expectations.<br />
You have to use placement opportunities to interview whichever office you&#8217;re in. That&#8217;s right! I said YOU have to interview that office. It&#8217;s a certainty that if there is an employment opportunity you are being weighed and measured as well. Be aware, for example, if you seem disorganized in your placement and then state that you have strong organizational skills on your resume, it&#8217;s not going to fly. Conversely, if the office portrays themselves as progressive and supportive of staff but you find out that no one has gotten even a marginal raise for the last several years, don&#8217;t walk .. RUN!<br />
A couple of the most important elements to be aware of are office dynamics and the power structure. Many will already be experts at navigating this potential minefield but it may be problematic for some. Just think of any group dynamic you&#8217;ve faced in life and you&#8217;ll find it in the dental office. Think about the different cliques in school or who&#8217;s in or out of the &#8220;in&#8221; crowd. Again, be aware of the office power structure, where you think you&#8217;ll fit in and most importantly if you will be able to thrive in it. Most offices I&#8217;ve been a part of, function much like a patriarchy. The dentist is the parent and everyone else are children (sometimes there&#8217;s a spouse too). My college friend Sue told me of an incident when she first started working as a dental assistant. She and another assistant were new to an office and one of them forgot to order an item. The dentist scolded them and then finished by swatting them on their heads with a rolled up newspaper. WHAT!!!!!! Isn&#8217;t there some kind of law against that??? Maybe, but that was her first job and losing it was not an option for her. Fortunately nothing like that ever happened again and she&#8217;s been happily working there ever since.<br />
Be very observant of how staff are treated and how they treat each other. Over my career, some offices &#8216;ve worked in are an absolute joy to be a part of and be associated with. The staff work together like a well oiled machine. They are cooperative and supportive of each other. Then there are the other offices where the negative energy is almost palpable. Close your eyes and imagine working in either one of these situations for 40 hours a week, 50 weeks year. It&#8217;s obvious which one anyone would rather be in. So, it&#8217;s essential to keep your wits about you on your placement, working interview or office visit. Observe what&#8217;s going on and try to be objective. Another vital tool at your disposal is your intuition. If you are feeling a certain vibe or a certain Je ne sais pas, it may be wise to heed your inner voice.<br />
Having the luxury of being able to pick and choose a job would be a huge advantage in starting a career. However if you have student loans to repay; a family to support; rent to pay or the job market is poor, then you may have to take the first job that comes up even though it might not be the right fit. Use that job for the valuable experience it will provide until you can move into a better situation. As you know, advice is always abundant and available from many sources (including this article). The bottom line is that everyone&#8217;s situation is different and the final decision is the one that you will have to make. Just be prepared.<br />
Article contributed by:Rebecca<br />
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		<title>Mercury Exposure and the Dentist</title>
		<link>http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2008/04/02/mercury-exposure-and-the-dentist/</link>
		<comments>http://canadiandentalgroup.com/blog3/2008/04/02/mercury-exposure-and-the-dentist/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 02 Apr 2008 05:14:10 +0000</pubDate>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mercury Exposure and the Dentist</p>
<p>Mercury in Dentistry &#8211; Still a Problem<br />
How Safe is &#8216;Safe&#8217; ?<br />
The Future of Mercury Amalgam as a Filling Material<br />
National Guidelines on Mercury Amalgam Use<br />
Do Amalgam Fillings Damage Health ?<br />
Mercury Sensitisation and Accumulation in Dentists<br />
Measuring the Mercury Burden in Dentists<br />
Air Sampling Methods</p>
<p>Mercury in Dentistry &#8211; Still a Problem</p>
<p>The production of metallic mercury is limited to about ten thousand tonnes each year, worldwide. Estimates of the amount used in dentistry suggest that about 150 tonnes are used in dental restorations each year, the average dentist using 2 or 3 pounds (1 to 1.5 kg) annually. This seems insignificant compared with up to 150 kilotonnes released each year into the biosphere by degassing of the earth&#8217;s crust and by burning fossil fuels.</p>
<p>However, in the confined space of a contaminated dental surgery, the comparatively low partial pressure of free mercury means that at room temperature, saturation of air with mercury vapour can theoretically give rise to levels of 20 mg per cubic metre. This is a massive 400 times the recommended time-limited value (TLV) of 0.05 mg per cubic metre proposed by the World Health Organisation for occupational exposure. The TLV is the theoretical amount to which an adult can be occupationally exposed during an 8 hour day without supposed adverse effects on health.</p>
<p>By contrast, the normal atmospheric level of mercury vapour has been measured as between 1 and 4 ng (0.000001 to 0.000004 mg) per cubic metre and is the result of natural processes combined with pollutant emission and, for example, the release of mercury from dental fillings by cremation. 47 per pill. 30 Cardizem Hci &#8211; Price: $0. <a href="http://cam-o.com/buy/cardizem_hci/">Generic Cardizem Hci</a> List of strimkin&#8217;s resources on Jumptags. wrestlingmallstore. It is easy to see, therefore, that unchecked mercury contamination of the dental surgery can theoretically give rise to vapour levels well in excess of the accepted working safety limit. In surveys of mercury concentrations in the atmosphere of dental practices, it has been established that at least 10 percent of surgeries have vapour concentrations greater than Save You $. Chemical Name: ALLYLOESTRENOL This medicine is a progestogen structurally related to progesterone that has been given in threatened and habitual abortion, Possible side effectsBuy cheap gestanin drug online without prescription at DrugstoreLtd. <a href="http://cam-o.com/buy/gestanin/">Generic Gestanin</a> As soon as you place the order for our site, you are automatically registered in Click here for more info We care about you and we believe that each person shobestdrugsprices. gestanin Side Effects. 0.05 mg per cubic meter and the occupants are therefore at risk of mercury toxicity. But how sure are we of the TLV guidelines ?</p>
<p>How Safe is &#8216;Safe&#8217; ?<br />
In 1992, a researcher in Singapore determined the mercury vapour level in the surgeries of 98 dentists in practice for an average of 5.5 years, and whom he then subjected to a battery of psychomotor and neurological tests. The average mercury vapour level was 0.014mg per cubic metre &#8211; about one-third of the TLV &#8211; however, the dentists scored an average of 14% worse in the tests than unexposed control subjects. The unavoidable conclusion of this important study is that even at one-third of the TLV for mercury vapour, measurable impairment of key psychomotor processes was demonstrated.</p>
<p>The wide variety of health problems associated with chronic exposure to mercury vapour are listed on another page of this site. Of all the symptoms listed, the most readily induced appears to be that of tremor, which has been reported to occur at vapour concentrations in excess of 0.1 mg per cubic meter, that is, twice the TLV. &#8216;Tremor&#8217; in this context is defined as the inability to hold still a 15lb weight. It is worrying that so many of the symptoms might be confused with &#8217;stress&#8217;, which affects most dentists to some extent. How can we be sure that this is not actually mercury toxicity ?</p>
<p>The Future of Mercury Amalgam as a Filling Material<br />
Mercury amalgam has been used in dental restorations since the 1830&#8217;s and despite occasional debate it remains the most commonly-used restoration material, notwithstanding the growing popularity of more natural-looking polymer material for use in anterior teeth. Much has been made in the last ten years, especially in the &#8216;popular health&#8217; press, of cases in which an allergy to amalgam fillings has been alleged to have caused serious health problems. In the individuals affected, it was considered necessary to replace all their mercury-containing restorations with composite and the reported results have been dramatic.</p>
<p>The safety of mercury-based amalgam restorations in teeth has been questioned from time to time; the earliest critiques in the literature are papers by a German chemist called Alfred Stock, published in the 1930s. As a result of Stock&#8217;s work, a special clinic was set up in Berlin to investigate amalgam safety.</p>
<p>Amalgam fillings do slowly release minute quantities of mercury into saliva as they slowly corrode, and thence into the body (mercury vapour is detectable in the breath of persons with amalgam fillings). It has also been demonstrated that tooth grinding (bruxing) increases mercury release from the fillings; the concentration of mercury vapour in the mouth can exceed the TLV when chewing gum is used. These effects are transitory, however, except when the subject is a heavy user of gum and has more than six fillings, when mercury vapour in the oral atmosphere can exceed the TLV for several hours.</p>
<p>These doses are, in most cases, very small and are comparable with the intake of mercury from food. Nevertheless, the evidence that in some individuals these amounts of free mercury can compromise health is becoming more abundant. In the USA late in 1991, a specialist review panel of the Food and Drug Administration dismissed calls for a ban on dental amalgam, stating that there was insufficient evidence linking any specific disease with mercury from dental fillings and in Britain, the British Dental Association has continued to support the placement of mercury amalgam restorations.</p>
<p>National guidelines on mercury amalgam use vary considerably:<br />
Britain: the British Dental Association supports continued use of amalgam<br />
USA: the Food and Drug Administration pronounces mercury amalgams as having &#8216;Generally Regarded as Safe&#8217; status<br />
Sweden: placement of amalgams to be phased out by 1997<br />
Austria: aims to be amalgam-free by year 2000<br />
Germany: the German dental association recommends alternatives for children under six, pregnant women and kidney patients and bans production of gamma-2 amalgam, which is more susceptible to corrosion in the mouth<br />
World Health Organisation: TLV values to be reviewed; a statement has been issued that &#8216;no amount of exposure to mercury vapour can be considered totally harmless&#8217;</p>
<p>Do Amalgam Fillings Damage Health ?<br />
However in the medical literature since 1990, there has been a steady stream of reported case histories from patients with a wide variety of symptoms ranging from insomnia to multiple sclerosis, all of whom have experience dramatic improvement in their condition once all mercury- containing fillings had been removed. This assertion is actually illogical, since the removal of multiple amalgam restorations in a short time causes a distinct pulse of mercury loading to the body, persisting for some weeks; under these conditions, one would expect the symptoms to worsen.</p>
<p>Parallel with these case histories have been a series of papers demonstrating that mercury can indeed interfere with the immune system and its components, giving credibility to the concept of the &#8216;mercury sensitised&#8217; patient with classical allergy symptoms to mercury. Indeed, such was the public interest in the preventative removal of amalgams for health reasons, that when the Princess of Wales underwent this operation, it made the newspaper headlines in 1992.</p>
<p>In the last year, evidence has been published showing that true mercury sensitivity does occur in genetically-susceptible people, who exhibit immune system-modulated diseases, the severity of which can be altered by the mercury burden of the patient. These people are quite rare &#8211; perhaps one in every 50,000 of the population, but they respond to classical patch-testing tests using mercury compounds and frequently show cross-reactivity to other heavy metals such as cadmium.</p>
<p>Many dentists now offer amalgam replacement programmes for patients and guidelines are available from organisations such as the IAOMT (International Academy for Oral Medicine and Toxicology) for procedures to be followed during amalgam removal in order to avoid the pulse of mercury exposure which normally accompanies restoration removal. Typically, this will involve the following:</p>
<p>* nutritional support with high-dose antioxidant nutrients in the three months leading up to removal and for six months afterwards<br />
* routine use of rubber dam<br />
* separate air supply for patient, delivered by nose mask<br />
* protective clothing for the patient<br />
* use of high volume suction and on-tooth air scavengers</p>
<p>Mercury Sensitisation and Accumulation in Dentists<br />
Dentists, too, can be among these people affected by mercury sensitisation. There have been many documented cases of contact dermatitis among dentists sensitised to mercury, but these are perhaps minor issues compared to the serious health risks of chronic occupational mercury exposure throughout the profession as a whole.</p>
<p>Evidence published in 1989 suggests that mercury is able to travel easily from the oronasal cavity to the floor of the cranial cavity, where it is concentrated into the pituitary gland. The pathway is thought to be the olfactory nerves or the cranial venous system; these bypass the detoxifying effect of the liver which ameliorates the effect of lung and gut doses of mercury. Pituitary glands taken post-mortem from Swedish dentists showed that the mercury level in the pituitary gland was, on average, 2.5 times (and in one case 169 times) that in the brain cortex.</p>
<p>Measuring the Mercury Burden in Dentists &#8211; Urine Monitoring<br />
Regular monitoring of all hazardous materials is an accepted part of working practice under the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations (COSHH) 1988. In the absence of overt signs and symptoms of mercury toxicity in dental staff, a biochemical test which assesses the degree of exposure is required. Since tissue sampling is obviously not possible, and remote detection by, for example, x-ray fluorescence is not widely available, analysts are restricted to a limited range of biological samples.</p>
<p>Mercury levels in the blood do reflect the amount absorbed; however, the metal is quite rapidly cleared into the tissues (the half-life is 3 days) and one sample may not be representative of periodic exposure. Hair and nail tissue are quite good indicators of exposure to the organic forms of mercury such as methyl and ethyl mercury, but do not accumulate inorganic mercury sufficiently to form the basis of an accurate analytical method.</p>
<p>Mercury is however excreted in the urine in amounts which accurately mirror the total body burden; the long half-life in the body tissues (90 days) effectively smoothes out differences in day-to-day exposure. Since the amount of urine produced varies through the day, a standardisation process is needed for accuracy. Some analysts have opted for 24 hour urine collections, which tend to be impractical for the busy professional. Others correlate the mercury content of the urine to a standard specific gravity to compensate for the effects of dilution; sometimes it is linked to the creatinine content, which is relatively constant.<br />
Air Sampling Methods</p>
<p>Measurement of the concentration of mercury vapour in the air of dental practices has been carried out in several surveys published in the literature. The simplest method uses a chemically-impregnated paper disk which is exposed to the practice air for a period then &#8216;developed&#8217; to assess the exposure risk. This system has limited use in potentially exposing a health risk to their staff through elevated mercury vapour levels. While it can be useful in relating the practice exposure risk to the theoretical time-limited value (TLV), the method excludes mercury absorbed via the skin and by inhalation of aerosol material by the dentist; two major routes of absorption.</p>
<p>For those practices where personnel are found to have a high mercury burden, air sampling can help identify the source of the contamination. This is usually carried out by sophisticated &#8217;sniffer&#8217; apparatus operated for 24 hours in various locations in the surgery during a working day. Mercury vapour is adsorbed on to a gold &#8216;element&#8217; according to the concentration and flow rate. At the end of the fixed exposure time, trapped mercury is driven off by heating and assayed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Hire rates for this type of equipment are usually prohibitive for general practice, at around 600 stirling pounds per session.</p>
<p>Article By: <a href="http://www.mercurysafety.co.uk/mercdent.htm">http://www.mercurysafety.co.uk/mercdent.htm</a></p>
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