Monday, 11 October 2021

How To Design Your Dental Clinic - Part 2

 


How To Design Your Dental Clinic - Part 2

The main reason we all want to have successful clinics is for a better future for our self and our families. It is important to design clinics in such a way that they can accommodate any future additions and changes. It is very important to understand the clinician’s idea and patient’s idea of a clinic. A patient may want a clean, nonsmelly, private chamber clinic where as the clinician will want a more functionally stable, well-equipped operatory. As both the needs are different, we need to have a balance between the two and create that balance in our clinics. From a clinician’s point of view, one must have a vision of his future clinic and ideas to execute them. Some may wish to expand; some may wish to make it more functional.

Let us start with basic planning…


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Floor plan

 

There should be smooth flow in work. There should be continuity from the reception till the working area to the restroom and to the laboratory room. The size of each room can be decided on the needs of a clinician. He may have a big reception and compromise on his chamber/ laboratory room or vice versa. The size of the treatment rooms should be such that the clinician, patient and the assistant get enough space and none of them feel claustrophobic. Some clinics have really small treatment rooms probably by no choice. For such rooms, concentrate on colours and lighting to make it look bigger.

 

 

Flooring

 

It can be different in different sections of the clinic. The reception can have a nice wooden or marble flooring to add that classy effect. Now days we have tiles which have wooden effect given to them. They look really good and are low maintenance. Carpets can be used in reception but not in treatment room, considering the difficulty to clean them and maintain infection control. The treatment and the cleaning room can have tiles which can be cleaned easily. Make sure your tiles are anti-slippery.

 

 

Colours and lighting

 

The lighting and the colours should be soothing and create a harmony for the mind to relax. They should complement the surrounding and make it look peaceful and serene. Having windows and natural light also soothes the mind and helps in better shade selection. Shade selection is an important often ignored aspect. Finally it’s all about the end result of an aesthetic case, however, beautiful your teeth preparations are, shade match has be to perfect. The treatment room should have ambient lighting with no shadows or dark areas. Colour theme for the flooring, walls and equipments can be in sync. Cool colours, pastel shades of green, blue and purple can be used in the treatment room. Warmer colours in shades of red, yellow and orange can be used in the reception.

 

 

Working/Treatment area

 

This is the area that should provide the clinician with peace. When you work, it should increase your productivity. It should not fatigue you and make your mind and body tired. There should be enough room for both the clinician and the assistant to work freely. The range of motion should be greater than 180 degrees. This area should have maximum space for all the instruments and equipments.

 

 

Photography section

 

Turn in one of your walls for photography. Documentation is a very important and forgotten aspect of our practices. There are various advantages of documentation. The first is you have a legal record of the work done. Secondly, one can learn so many things from pictures. The patient also feels special and that glamour quotient is added.

 

 

Latest equipments

 

Dentistry is going through lot of digital development. Though one may not have the finances to have better equipped clinics today, but surely things will be different in future. One may then wish to have an in house OPG machine or CBCT machines. One should plan for space accordingly in the present to accommodate in the future. Many people now can afford such machines but due to lack of space are unable to have them.

 

 

Professional Looks

 

Looking professional and appealing is need of the time. There should be architectural and design balance with clinical needs, ergonomics and technology. Patients would like to go to a clinic which is well organised, equipped, provide quality service and excellent presentation. If you do not have such a vision to design and plan, hire professional designers and architects who will help you to execute your needs in a better and planned way.

 

 

Stay tuned for part 3………..where we discuss various sections in a dental clinic and their designing and importance in detail.

 

You can contact us if you need help in designing your clinics.

Brand and Logo Designing.

Designing the clinic according to your needs.

Ergonomically designed clinics.

Improve your existing dental clinic.

Construction specifications for a dental facility.

 How To Make Your Clinic A Patient Magnet? - Part 1



Source : DentistFriend

Friday, 8 October 2021

Myths & Facts About Doctors

 


Myths & Facts About Doctors

Myth 1: "Only medical profession is a noble profession"

 

Fact: Every profession, whether of a teacher, soldier, tailor or shopkeeper, is noble, if done with sincerity and integrity. A careless doctor can kill one, a careless  driver can kill dozens, a careless engineer can kill hundreds..


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Myth 2: "As it is a service to humanity, doctors should not run after money."

 

Fact: Money is an important measure of success. Running after it is not good for anybody, but earning more money by doing more work is not a moral crime. And all who advising doctors, themselves running after money, aren't they?

 

Myth 3: "Most of the time, doctors do not understand the disease and write unnecessary and costly drugs and advise tests and treat on a trial basis."

 

Fact: First of all, the doctor patient relationship is based on trust, if you do not trust your doctor, go to another one. Medical science is a lifelong learning process, and all treatment, to some extent is based on trial and error. The same medicine, which works for one patient may not work on another. 

 

Second, the responsibility of providing quality drugs at affordable prices lies not with the doctor, but with the state authorities, just like providing for better roads, unadulterated quality food and dairy products, uninterrupted power and water supply etc and etc. Like cloths, cars and mobile phones, costly drugs are generally better than cheap ones. However, if the government makes it mandatory to write generics, it should ensure quality and the consequence of poor/non efficacy should not be blamed on doctors.

 

Third, tests are done for patient’s own safety. Just like wearing a helmet or seat belt, investigations increase the safety. Most of the doctors in india are trained to work on clinical hunch and common sense and not rely too much on tests, and advise much less tests than what is actually written in the book or done in the developed world.

 

Myth 4: "Treatment costs are increasing irrationally."

 

Fact: As compared to western world, treatment costs in India are still very low, and many foreigners are coming here for this reason. And it would be worthwhile to think about any other service or product with as rapid advancement in technology and equipment as medical science, whose cost is not increasing

 

Myth 5: "Doctors are next to God."

 

Fact: Doctors are as human as can be. They also get tired, fall sick, have family commitments, get upset and stressed sometimes and can suffer from all the frailties of a human being. If anyone wanted to be treated by God then they can visit the temple.


Source : DentistFriend