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Keyword: dentistry

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  • Dentists: Two Out of Three Prefer Republican Rule

    01/01/2008 1:06:46 AM PST · by 2ndDivisionVet · 5 replies · 198+ views
    Press Release Newswire ^ | January 1, 2008 | Jim Du Molin
    A recent Wealthy Dentist survey asked dentists who they would like to see win the upcoming US presidential election. Two out of three dentists responding to this survey said they would rather see a Republican in the Oval Office than a Democrat. Among the dentists surveyed, the Republican favorite was Mitt Romney, while Democrats prefer Hillary Clinton. Though this poll only surveyed dentists, the implications reach beyond the profession of dentistry. Dentists see over 30 million Americans each month, allowing them to both hear and influence people's opinions on a wide range of topics. Among the 71% of dentists who...
  • In Kentucky’s Teeth, Toll of Poverty and Neglect

    12/24/2007 7:18:58 PM PST · by neverdem · 122 replies · 349+ views
    NY Times ^ | December 24, 2007 | IAN URBINA
    BARBOURVILLE, Ky. — In the 18 years he has been visiting nursing homes, seeing patients in his private practice and, more recently, driving his mobile dental clinic through Appalachian hills and hollows, Dr. Edwin E. Smith has seen the extremes of neglect. He has seen the shame of a 14-year-old girl who would not lift her head because she had lost most of her teeth from malnutrition, and the do-it-yourself pride of an elderly mountain man who, unable to afford a dentist, pulled his own infected teeth with a pair of pliers and a swig of peroxide. He has seen...
  • Cabbie Pulls Teeth Out (Socialized Medicine = DIY Dentistry)

    10/21/2007 8:48:47 PM PDT · by DogByte6RER · 19 replies · 136+ views
    Breitbart.com ^ | October 20, 2007 | The Press Association
    Cabbie pulls teeth out Oct 20 09:08 AM US/Eastern A man described how he pulled out seven of his own teeth because he was told to wait for an appointment to see an NHS dentist. Taxi driver Arthur Haupt used pliers and a technique he had learned in the army to carry out the DIY dentistry. He said he was forced in agony into taking the drastic action because he was given a three-week wait by staff at his local NHS dental surgery.
  • English 'pull own teeth' as Dental Service Decays

    10/15/2007 4:34:04 AM PDT · by TruthFactor · 28 replies · 119+ views
    Mail & Guardian Online & AFP ^ | 15 October 2007 | AFP
    Falling numbers of state dentists in England has led to some people taking extreme measures, including extracting their own teeth, according to a new study released Monday. Others have used superglue to stick crowns back on, rather than stumping up for private treatment, said the study. One person spoke of carrying out 14 separate extractions on himself with pliers. More typically, a lack of publicly-funded dentists means that growing numbers go private: 78 percent of private patients said they were there because they could not find a National Health Service (NHS) dentist, and only 15 percent because of better treatment....
  • U.K.: Patients turn to DIY dentistry as the crisis in NHS care deepens (National Health Service)

    10/15/2007 12:59:06 AM PDT · by Stoat · 8 replies · 261+ views
    The Daily Mail (U.K.) ^ | October 15, 2007 | JENNY HOPE
    Patients turn to DIY dentistry as the crisis in NHS care deepensBy JENNY HOPE - More by this author » Last updated at 06:48am on 15th October 2007 Hard to swallow: Few can find an NHS dentist The parlous state of NHS dentistry was exposed yesterday.  Such is the shortage of state-funded dentists that one in 20 patients has resorted to DIY treatment, in some cases pulling out their own teeth.  One in five has gone without treatment because of the cost. And of those who have registered with a private dentist, three-quarters did so only because their surgery stopped...
  • Dentists Spread False Fluoride Data

    08/22/2007 4:54:18 PM PDT · by nyscof · 21 replies · 519+ views
    Fluoride Action Network ^ | 8/22/07 | Fluoride Action Network
    ADA Distributing Misleading Information on Two Federal Fluoride Reports, Says Fluoride Action Network New York -- In a statement released August 9, 2007, over 600 dentists, physicians, scientists and environmentalists urge Congress to stop water fluoridation until Congressional hearings are conducted. They cite new scientific evidence that fluoridation, long promoted to fight tooth decay, is ineffective and has serious health risks. (http://www.fluorideaction.org/statement.august.2007.html) Signers include a Nobel Prize winner, three members of the prestigious 2006 National Research Council (NRC) panel that reported on fluoride’s toxicology, two officers in the Union representing professionals at EPA headquarters, the President of the International Society...
  • Can't someone pull off a painless Tooth extraction?

    08/21/2007 5:22:27 PM PDT · by Coleus · 107 replies · 4,650+ views
    star ledger ^ | August 20, 2007 | SILVIO LACCETTI
    Opening King Tut's tomb brought to light treasures and curses hidden for thousands of years. One of the lat ter still haunts us -- the curse of King Tut's tooth. Tut, like many teenagers, needed a tooth extraction, in his case, an impacted wisdom tooth. Sadly, ancient Egyptian dentistry was unable to help the boy-pharaoh, as extractions were done only on very loose teeth, by the gentle touch of fingers. Even forceps (pliers) were probably not employed until long after Tut died. Astonishingly, modern dental extraction procedures are still mired in the technology of the an cient world. Recently, I...
  • Prankster dentist wins case against insurer (Implanted boar tusks in assistant's mouth)

    07/27/2007 11:57:11 AM PDT · by Stoat · 66 replies · 3,527+ views
    The Times of India ^ | July 27, 2007
    Prankster dentist wins case against insurer27 Jul 2007, 0733 hrs IST,AP OLYMPIA, WASHINGTON: An oral surgeon who played a practical joke on his assistant by implanting fake boar tusks in her mouth while she was under anesthesia was sued for it, but ended up getting a last laugh. Dr. Robert Woo, who is originally from Hong Kong, took photos of her porcine dental work that later made the rounds. The employee, Tina Alberts, felt humiliated and quit, later suing her boss. When Woo's insurance company, Fireman's Fund, would not deal with the lawsuit, Woo settled out of court with...
  • Americans flock to Mexico for dentistry

    07/02/2007 2:58:13 PM PDT · by Kid Shelleen · 78 replies · 1,791+ views
    Washington Post ^ | 07/02/07 | Manuel Roig-Franzia
    ---snip--- Americans travel to Mexico for stomach surgery, eye exams and routine checkups. But it is the dentistas - thousands strung along the border - who are in the vanguard in attracting U.S. health consumers. Mexican dentists often charge one-fifth to one-fourth of those north of the border. Their operating costs are substantially lower, and because the Mexican legal system makes it almost impossible to sue them, they don't have to worry about high malpractice premiums.
  • Unbrushed Teeth Reveal Ancient Diets

    03/07/2007 9:57:13 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 15 replies · 823+ views
    Discovery News ^ | March 2, 2007 | Jennifer Viegas
    [A]ncient tartar-encrusted teeth may be a biological gold mine for scientists, thanks to a new technique for extracting food particles from teeth that once belonged to prehistoric humans. The method already has solved a mystery surrounding what early coastal Brazilians ate. In the future, similar studies may reveal clues about other ancient diets, particularly in areas with little plant preservation from earlier times... Eggers explained that ancient tartar could reveal what an individual ate in the days or weeks before death. Evidence suggests some prehistoric populations cleaned their teeth -- using fibrous foods and shell fragments as natural abrasives --...
  • Dentist Removed Teeth Of Grumbling Patient (Without Anasthetic)

    01/13/2007 6:30:44 AM PST · by Loyalist · 12 replies · 389+ views
    Times Online ^ | January 13, 2007 | Michael Horsnell
    A dentist who pulled out an elderly woman’s teeth without anaesthetic “to teach her a lesson” has been struck off. David Quelch left the retired nurse, who was 87, with blood pouring from her mouth from two extractions after she had complained to her doctor about the quality of previous treatment by the dentist. After a three-day hearing the General Dental Council found Mr Quelch, 54, guilty of serious professional misconduct and ordered his name to be removed from the register. The woman, referred to as Patient A, gave her evidence via a video link. She said: “Mr Quelch told...
  • Zotted Trolls Love Socialism is the best form of government (and here why)

    08/28/2006 1:33:08 PM PDT · by hand out love all · 5,619 replies · 20,392+ views
    Socialism is best because under socialism. No one has to worry about being poor or starving to death. No one is poor, unemployed, discriminated, everyone is equal reguardless or race or creed. Today such ideas are condemned as evil. Any attempt to protest against slavery and genocide and human rights violations are met with the cries of COMMUNISM! By the religious right and then they conjure up stories about Stalin, Gulags, tortue, police state etc. So therefore we must stick with the current system of sweat shop slavery, poverty and racism while rich people who already have all they will...
  • Feds examine safety of mercury fillings

    09/08/2006 6:34:46 PM PDT · by neverdem · 17 replies · 443+ views
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | September 8, 2006 | ANDREW BRIDGES
    ASSOCIATED PRESS WASHINGTON -- Federal health officials are again examining what's known - and what's still to be learned - about the safety of a mercury mixture that's stirred controversy since dentists began using it to fill cavities in the 1800s. A joint panel of outside experts voted Thursday to reject a draft report that concluded that dental fillings used by millions of people are safe. Yet the panel did not go so far as to declare the mercury-laden amalgam a danger, only that more study is needed because of the risk it poses to some groups. "For the general...
  • Baby teeth might be source of stem cells

    07/17/2006 12:00:50 PM PDT · by Salman · 27 replies · 741+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 17 July 2006 | UPI
    AUSTIN, Texas, July 17 (UPI) -- A Texas company has reportedly started freezing stem cells taken from baby teeth pulp tissue in hopes the cells might some day lead to disease treatments. BioEden Inc., which opened for business last week, told the Austin (Texas) American-Statesman, it's betting the science eventually will catch up with its aspirations. "We are absolutely confident this will work," Jeff Johnson, president of Austin's BioEden, told the newspaper. "All indications are this is a wonderful source of stem cells." The company said it expects baby teeth stem cells might eventually be used for bone, teeth nerve...
  • Smile! A new Canadian tool can re-grow teeth say inventors

    06/28/2006 4:10:41 PM PDT · by AntiGuv · 21 replies · 938+ views
    Agence France-Presse ^ | June 28, 2006 | AFP
    Snaggle-toothed hockey players and sugar lovers may soon rejoice as Canadian scientists said they have created the first device able to re-grow teeth and bones. The researchers at the University of Alberta in Edmonton filed patents earlier this month in the United States for the tool based on low-intensity pulsed ultrasound technology after testing it on a dozen dental patients in Canada. "Right now, we plan to use it to fix fractured or diseased teeth, as well as asymmetric jawbones, but it may also help hockey players or children who had their tooth knocked out," Jie Chen, an engineering professor...
  • Studies of dental fillings reassuring

    04/18/2006 7:01:06 PM PDT · by neverdem · 40 replies · 1,281+ views
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer ^ | April 18, 2006 | DON BABWIN
    ASSOCIATED PRESS CHICAGO -- Two long-awaited, government-funded studies found no evidence that dental fillings containing mercury can cause IQ-lowering brain damage or other neurological problems in children. Children with such fillings were no more likely than other youngsters to suffer such problems, the researchers found. Some experts found the findings powerfully reassuring. But the studies are unlikely to end the fierce debate over the long-term effects of what are known as amalgam fillings, and some advocates bitterly accused the researchers of conducting unethical experiments on children. Amalgam fillings, also called silver fillings, are made of mercury and other metals and...
  • Fluoride Foes Win the Year - Scientifically & Politically

    01/24/2006 3:11:50 AM PST · by nyscof · 69 replies · 1,703+ views
    Fluoride Action Network ^ | January 2006 | Fluoride Action Network
    New York - January 16, 2006 - Fluoride, added to water supplies, is touted as a tooth decay preventive. Science increasingly shows fluoridation is ineffective, harmful and a waste of money. But the politics of organized dentistry keeps fluoridated water flowing. Last year, 2005, was a very successful year for the Fluoride Action Network (FAN) and their affiliated groups for getting the truth out and bringing negative fluoride science to the media’s attention. Voters rejected fluoridation in at least nine referenda including Bellingham, Washington, where fluoridationists spent $260,000 to lose against a small group of volunteers armed with the truth...
  • Sweet solution to fighting cavities

    A two-year study in the latest issue of the Journal of Clinical Dentistry found that CaviStat, a calcium/arginine-based product, was more effective than fluoride in fighting tooth decay when used in toothpaste form. The study, involving 726 children, found the group using CaviStat had 58 percent fewer cavities than those using over-the-counter fluoride toothpaste.
  • Whitening kits can wipe smile from your face

    10/15/2005 8:01:16 PM PDT · by M. Espinola · 16 replies · 1,069+ views
    The Times ^ | October 15th, 2005 | David Rose
    PRODUCTS on sale over the counter that promise to whiten teeth can exacerbate gum disease and are illegal under European law, the British Dental Association (BDA) said yesterday. An increasing number of people want to polish their stained teeth to achieve whiter, brighter smiles. Private dental clinics are also smiling as the market for cosmetic dentistry in Britain has grown over a decade to be worth a reputed £1 billion. But products that contain high levels of peroxide dye can make teeth and gums painfully sensitive, the BDA warned consumers. Do-it-yourself tooth-whitening kits are available in high street pharmacies and...
  • Mobile Dentists Help Appalachia Smile

    07/22/2005 5:35:03 AM PDT · by mlc9852 · 20 replies · 614+ views
    Yahoo! News ^ | July 22, 2005 | ROGER ALFORD, Associated Press Writer
    STANTON, Ky. - With a silvery Airstream trailer as a dental office, Dr. Jeff Bailey goes about his work, brightening the often gapped smiles of people in a part of the country with the highest rate of toothlessness in America. Bailey, one of many volunteers who are bringing free mobile dental care to poor people in the hills and hollows of Appalachia, sees case after case of severe tooth decay and gum disease — the consequences of sugary foods, cigarettes, chewing tobacco, a lack of fluoridated water, and simple neglect.