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Between Covid, Vaccinations, and now monkey pox and a polio variant🫣 😫. The patients and team are most appreciative of volunteers. Now, I enjoy volunteering where I can determine my schedule, my hours, and perform true quality of care. Clinical Dental Hygiene is by far the most challenging and most changed over time for me. I have been a dental assistant, dental office manager, and in dental sales/consulting throughout my career. If it is toxic or production driven, they are moving on. I also believe hygienist are being very selective about their work environment.

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It does not a reflect every office out there.

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That is my personal story after multiple jobs over 30 plus years in the dental field. Lastly, the physical pain from seeing patient after patient, back to back was literally breaking down my back and neck. My hygiene schedule was created by clerical team members and based on production rather than individualized treatment recommendations from me, the licensed professional.ģ. (The phrase “do what you can, in the time you have”, doesn’t work for me or my patient.)Ģ. Too many adminsitrative tasks were being added to my responsibilities that reduced the quality of service to my patients. And since there's a shortage, anyone who wants to work in dentistry is highly likely to find an office that shares this philosophy.ġ. I wish some of you could've worked with many of the dentists I know who feel the same way. These problems are multi-faceted and deserve more than a blanket statement that blames dentists, many who absolutely love their hygiene colleagues. 1 out of 3 dental providers leave early due to muscoskeletal injuries COVID amplified the stress level dramatically states like ours are not training enough RDHs to meet the need, a pre-COVID problem, too DSOs are adding strain to a thin labor pool the list goes on. It's not simply "a lack of appreciation" driving this shortage, which is a singular statement, an "us vs them" position. However, we've attempted to hire more support and nothing we've tried has even attracted a single applicant. They're appreciated, included in planning, enjoy assistant support, well-paid, and offered many benefits. I've led a busy group practice for years that includes 3 hygienists that have been part of a team that works like a family. Obama was out for blood, and the crowd ate it up.Generalizations are dangerous. "Miss Sweden, Miss Argentina, Miss Azerbaijan." He also added that Trump "has spent years meeting leaders from around the world." Pause. "Is this dinner too tacky for The Donald? What could he possibly be doing instead? Is he at home, eating a Trump Steak, tweeting out insults to Angela Merkel?" he asked, rhetorically. His final speech offered the crowd a not-so-subtle Clinton endorsement-slash-prediction - suggesting that his replacement would be a "she," and the pronoun speaking volumes - as well as several well-intentioned jabs towards Clinton.Īnd, of course, Obama didn't hold back when it came to Donald Trump. He left the stage, symbolically leaving an eight-year presidency that had been marked by, along other things, his second-to-none comic timing. With that, Obama held two fingers to his lips, lifted the mic, and physically dropped it. “With that, I have just two more words to say," Obama said, finishing a speech that had delighted the crowd, "Obama Out." After what felt like hours of red-carpet arrivals and watching important people in fancy gowns eating their dinner, we finally got to see President Obama's last-ever White House Correspondents' Dinner speech - and nobody enjoyed that swan song more than Obama himself, whose laugh-out-loud speech included a "Couch Commander" segment, a cameo from Boehner, well-timed digs at Donald Trump, and an unforgettable "Obama-out" mic drop to end his WHCD speech.









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