by CH Root | Apr 20, 2020 | Dental Innovation, Design and Architecture, Food for thought, Patient Experience, Smile
As a practitioner, your work has always been the foundation of your practice. How your practice is experienced is likely to have been, while important, a secondary factor. This pause we are experiencing with COVID-19 is a time to think about how to make your patient’s...
by CH Root | Mar 4, 2020 | Design and Architecture, Food for thought, Patient Experience, Smile
At its core patient experience is humans caring for other humans. For treatments to be successful and sought after this care must be felt in all interactions. A patient’s assessment of their experience comes down to the quality of care experienced in the series...
by CH Root | Jan 22, 2020 | Design and Architecture, Food for thought, Patient Experience, Science, Smile
If the sole purpose of buildings is the form or a place where humans can simply gather for some specific purpose, why then would they have the ability to positively impact us physiologically?1 Neuroarchitecture marries the disciplines of neuroscience, psychology, and...
by CH Root | Jan 14, 2020 | Case Studies, Featured, Food for thought
Tips to Help Find the Right Space for your Dental Practice The ideal practice has likely been a dream that you have slowly constructed over your years practicing as a Dentist. What this space looks like, how it functions and most importantly – how it feels....
by CH Root | Dec 2, 2019 | Dental Innovation, Design and Architecture, Food for thought, Patient Experience, Smile
What does Changing the Public Perception of Dentistry mean to OPTIMA? In short, it means finding ways to remove all barriers and stigmas that stand in the way of making oral health a top priority for all Australians. To achieve this, we must help Dentists understand...
by CH Root | Nov 4, 2019 | Design and Architecture, Food for thought
Phobias related to trips to the dentist are hardly a new phenomenon. Many of your potential patients are fraught with memories of past experiences; stark white walls, endless fluorescent lighting, and vinyl seating that clings to sweaty palms, it is easy to understand...