Do you hate the dentist?
Throughout my career I have found that the
greatest battle for patients is overcoming their fear or anxiety of the
dentist. “I hate the dentist!” is often how I am greeted, most often shortly
followed by “no offence!”. None taken, we’ve just met so I seriously hope that
it is not personal otherwise I may need to take a long hard look in the mirror.
It’s the dental treatment you hate, not the
dentist. This usually stems from historical treatment that was either painful
or pretty uncomfortable. This can sometimes be accompanied by a grumpy and
uncaring dentist making the whole experience fairly poor. Dentistry as a
profession has come on leaps on bounds in the last few decades and it continues
to advance at a huge rate thanks to increased research and development along
with technological advances. Dentistry, and us Dentists, are more than aware
that a visit to the dentist can fill you with dread but we also know that the
experience should be painless and not cause nightmares or sleepless nights.
The most common fears will be the
expectation of pain, needle phobia, the noises, the sensations of a dental
drill and the fear still lingering from a previous “bad visit”. The advances
mentioned before can greatly help to reduce your fears and hopefully make them
vanish in time. For example, modern dental anesthetics should be highly
effective and thus eradicate any feeling of pain during a dental procedure.
Even the administering of the anesthetic should be relatively pain free with
the use of topical anesthetic gel, something your dentist may refer to as
numbing gel. Some dentists may own a device that will self administer the
anesthetic in a very slow controlled manner so that it is highly effective to
the single tooth you are having treated but more importantly can barely be
felt. This will go a long way to help you overcome your needle phobia.
The fact will then follow that if you have
adequate numbness of the area you should feel no pain and nothing to fear. But
the noise is horrible? Sounds like nails down a blackboard? Modern dental
drills are becoming more and more quiet making them more tolerable but even
then you should take along your music MP3 player and listen to this to help
relax you and take away the noise.
These are all wonderful ideas and will most
definitely help but the main thing for you to find is a dentist you trust and
one you feel comfortable with. This should go without saying but dentists are
only human and we all cant like everyone. It important to do some research not
only online but more importantly from word of mouth speak to friends and
relatives to ask if they have a dentist who they use and recommend. It will go
a long way to making you feel happier about your visit in the chair.
There are no treatments in dentistry that
should be associated with pain, including root canal therapy and wisdom teeth
extractions, although post operatively these may bring some discomfort, your
visit to the dentist should be pretty much without pain. If a patient comes to
me initially petrified of what is to come, I see that as a challenge to prove
them that it is not only not as bad as they expect but actually nothing to
worry about at all. It can take several visits before this can be achieved but
usually it is. If all else fails and someone is just too phobic then you can
always request treatment under sedation so, under a controlled environment, you
take the appropriate medications to help relax you. This though should be a
last resort.
It is well known that nearly half of Australians
do not visit the dentist. This is a staggering fact and one that profession has
a duty to put right. I hope that with time, greater care and education people
will no longer fears us as they have. We go through extensive training to get
where we are and we have a professional obligation to continue our training
throughout our careers. Remember we are only there to help you.
David Hurst BDS (Lon)
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