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12
26th April 19:06
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Posts: 1
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No I mean make an appointment but tell the Doc you are very patient
and if he needs to double-book you with someone else, fine,,,, you will wait patiently. I had many people with great dental need in a very busy practice. Many would give me the courtesy of doing exactly that. So with those kinds of people I could perform their dentistry when I had a lull in my schedule, This is preferable to a rat-race type of circumstance where the patient is demanding. Made their dentistry fun because it was pressure-less. Joel On 06 Sep 2003 01:39:44 GMT, aylacaralia1@aol.com (AylaCaralia1) -- Joel M. Eichen, . Philadelphia PA STANDARD DISCLAIMER applies: <You fill it in> |
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13
30th April 23:16
External User
Posts: 1
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On 06 Sep 2003 01:39:44 GMT, aylacaralia1@aol.com (AylaCaralia1)
Yes, the receptionists are trained very well. And the first dentist I consulted.....no one gets an appointment without indicating precisely how payment is to be made. I called for an appointment....... Receptionist: And how will you be paying? Me: I can pay by credit card or check....... Receptionist (interrupting).....We prefer cash. What!!! Well, after several seconds of silence, I told her I don't carry large amounts of cash, So it seems a credit card is acceptable, and appointment made. Now, this is a dentist that my husband has gone to several times for routine stuff, and a root canal. They knew that,. And this is the same dentist that has cosmetic dentistry "informercials" playing in the waiting room, and every treatment room. The same dentist who examined me attired in a casual "on my way out to play golf" outfit. The same one whose office staff and assistants could have been cleaning ladies the way they were dressed. And the same one who gave me a bouquet of flowers when I was on my way out! Needles to say, I won't be going back there, and neither will my husband. Carly |
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