• Best Practices New Normal
  • Digital Dentistry
  • Data Security
  • Implants
  • Catapult Education
  • COVID-19
  • Digital Imaging
  • Laser Dentistry
  • Restorative Dentistry
  • Cosmetic Dentistry
  • Periodontics
  • Oral Care
  • Evaluating Dental Materials
  • Cement and Adhesives
  • Equipment & Supplies
  • Ergonomics
  • Products
  • Dentures
  • Infection Control
  • Orthodontics
  • Technology
  • Techniques
  • Materials
  • Emerging Research
  • Pediatric Dentistry
  • Endodontics
  • Oral-Systemic Health

Dental management companies backed by private equity firms could face restrictions

Publication
Article
dentalproductsreport.comdentalproductsreport.com-2012-06-01
Issue 6

North Carolina is at the front line in a national struggle over dental management companies.

North Carolina is at the front line in a national struggle over dental management companies.

A North Carolina bill, that is currently stalled in a House committee, would put in place new rules on such companies. Private equity firms have bought or put money into at least 25 dental management companies in the past decade, reported the Washington Post.

The North Carolina Dental Society is backing a bill to regulate dental service organizations more closely because it says some of these groups are crossing the line and essentially controlling dental practices.

The fight in North Carolina comes as at least five states are conducting audits or reviews of how dental-management companies do business.

Lisa Ward, Director of Government Affairs for the North Carolina Dental Society, said they're looking at North Carolina as their test case.

"They'll do anything they can to win here," said Lisa Ward in an MSN.com article.

While some dentists argue that the dental management companies are taking an administrative burden off the backs of dentists and allowing them to concentrate on more patients, supporters of the bill say it's an attempt by out-of-state, investor-owned corporations to come in and exert control in dental practices and get in between the doctor-patient relationship.

According to Dr. Alec Parker, the North Carolina Dental Society's Executive Director, some organizations are imposing quotas and encouraging dentists to persuade patients that they need certain treatments.

The North Carolina bill would mandate a regulatory review of agreements between dental management companies and dentists to make sure corporations aren't driving clinical decision- making. Laws in North Carolina and at least 40 other states bar corporate dentistry because of concerns that the profit motive raises the risk of unnecessary or shoddy care.

 

 

Related Videos
2024 Chicago Dental Society Midwinter Meeting – Interview with Peter Maroon, business development and sales lead at Spectrum Solutions® on the new salivary diagnostic test, SimplyPERIO.
GNYDM23 Product Focus: Henry Schein Maxima Turbo Class B Sterilizer with Dyan Jayjack
GNYDM23 Product Focus: Henry Schein Maxima PowerClean 210 with Dyan Jayjack
Greater New York Dental Meeting 2023 — Interview with Ben Miraglia, DDS
Greater New York Dental Meeting 2023 – Interview with Crystal Spring, RDH, BS, LAP
Dental Product Insights: Keeping Up With Patient Communication Expectations – Part 4: Lighthouse 360+
Dental Product Insights: Keeping Up With Patient Communication Expectations – Part 3: Customizing Communications
Dental Product Insights: Keeping Up With Patient Communication Expectations – Part 2: Making the Practice Available
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.