Summertime
is a popular time for visiting guests in our home. Our most recent guest, Ivy,
is a friend of my eldest daughter, Isabel. They met on Tumblr. My daughter was
blogging about feeling low, a common feeling amongst teenagers, and out of the
blue comes this other teenager in Vancouver, 1,000 km away, who reached out to
my daughter and cheered her up. My wife and I had no idea this had happened.
Months
later we finally heard about it and on a summer trip to Vancouver, Isabel
begged us to find time to meet this young woman named Ivy, who Isabel described
as her “best friend” though she had never met her live and in person. We agreed
to meet in a public place, at a mall, and I have to admit, she was a delightful
young woman who had a real head on her shoulders; she was brimming with
confidence, positivity, and good vibes. We all fell for this charming young
lady and a good friendship continued to blossom between these two young ladies.
That was three years ago.
We just finished
taking Ivy back to the airport in Calgary to have her fly home after a great 11-day
visit with us. On her last evening here, I asked her what her favourite food
is, so we could have a farewell meal in her honour featuring her favourite tasty
treats. To our surprise, she said, “meat pies.”
Thankfully,
there is a local restaurant that is known for its meat pies—the British Chippy—so
off we went. It’s a little place in an out-of-the-way strip mall, but it has
authentic British fare, homemade meat pies, British soft drinks that are hard
to find elsewhere, and more. We all had meat pies and chips. (As an aside, why
do the British people call french fries “chips?” Is it because they don’t want
to call anything “French?”…even though french fries are not really “French,” and
the French just call them frites…oh, it is all so confusing!) It was a
delicious farewell dinner.
But it
got me thinking about our British colleagues and dentistry. As a resident of a
fellow commonwealth country, we have long considered British dentistry to be
less than ideal, especially if it was done prior to 1990. For a long time, dentistry
was a covered benefit in their health care system, but the system paid the
dentists such a low rate for the work provided that only the lowest cost care
could be reasonably provided. It resulted in lots of five-surface amalgam
fillings, untreated periodontal disease, lots of extractions and dentures, but
not much else.
Now I am
not an expert on the state of British dentistry, but the National Health
Service has relaxed the rules and “private” dentistry is now allowed. As a
result, the quality of care and choices available to the general public have
rapidly improved to be of the high quality seen elsewhere in the western world.
Unfortunately,
as time has progressed, so has emerged the addition of more and more regulatory
agencies involved in dentistry that have led to a confusing array of rules and
regulations, which has our colleagues’ heads spinning…wondering just who do
they answer to? And who is their advocate? It’s a troubling situation. It’s a
situation that is not unfamiliar to me, due to the out-of-control Alberta
Dental Association and College. Thankfully, a group of dentists
in Alberta are working with the Provincial Government to encourage a separation
of the regulatory college and professional association in order to improve
transparency and protection for the general public we serve, and to have a
valid, active, and compassionate voice of advocacy on behalf of the profession
of dentistry.
It is
time.
Warm
regards,
Larry
Stanleigh, BSc, MSc, DDS, FADI, FICD, FACD
3 comments:
Interesting reading. Thanks for sharing. Thoroughly enjoyed reading what you have to say
Nice one.was just reading for blogs by dentists and found yrs interesting and compact.and yes enjoyed the reading
Great read, thank you so much for your interesting article! Keep it up!
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