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Alex Buciu's story reads like something from another era. From endodontics in Romania to amalgams in Northern Ireland, his path through dentistry mirrors a deeper journey through loss, resilience and reinvention.
When your mum dies at 14 and you're watching it happen, something shifts inside. When you arrive in a new country with £3,100 in your pocket—half of it borrowed—you learn what matters.
Alex talks about communication trumping clinical skill every time, about choosing kindness when you're capable of violence, and why he'd rather be a brilliant generalist than a mediocre anything-else.
There's philosophy here, hard-won wisdom, and the kind of honesty that only comes from someone who's genuinely fought for everything they have.
In This Episode
00:02:15 - Qualifying in Romania and building an endodontics practice
00:03:10 - The shock of NHS dentistry
00:08:40 - Why leave Romania
00:18:45 - Finding mentor Kieran
00:20:05 - Arriving with £3,100
00:26:00 - How to choose courses wisely
00:26:45 - The occlusion eureka moment
00:32:05 - Why not endodontics in the UK
00:37:35 - Moving to Peterborough
00:42:45 - Building from zero patients
00:44:00 - Favourite courses and lecturers
00:52:40 - Communication beats clinical skill
00:58:15 - Growing up under Ceaușescu
01:08:25 - Losing his mother at 14
01:14:20 - Volunteering in trauma
01:17:10 - Near-death experiences
01:24:50 - Blackbox thinking
01:35:40 - Fantasy dinner party
01:41:55 - Last days and legacy
About Alex Buciu
Alex qualified in Romania in 2004 and built a successful endodontics-focused practice before moving to Northern Ireland in 2018, later settling in Peterborough. He works as a private associate, focusing on restorative dentistry, occlusion and TMD, with a particular passion for continuous education and patient communication. Despite significant personal challenges, including arriving in the UK with minimal resources, he's built a reputation as an excellence-driven clinician who believes communication matters more than clinical perfection.
By Prav Solanki & Payman Langroudi5
22 ratings
Alex Buciu's story reads like something from another era. From endodontics in Romania to amalgams in Northern Ireland, his path through dentistry mirrors a deeper journey through loss, resilience and reinvention.
When your mum dies at 14 and you're watching it happen, something shifts inside. When you arrive in a new country with £3,100 in your pocket—half of it borrowed—you learn what matters.
Alex talks about communication trumping clinical skill every time, about choosing kindness when you're capable of violence, and why he'd rather be a brilliant generalist than a mediocre anything-else.
There's philosophy here, hard-won wisdom, and the kind of honesty that only comes from someone who's genuinely fought for everything they have.
In This Episode
00:02:15 - Qualifying in Romania and building an endodontics practice
00:03:10 - The shock of NHS dentistry
00:08:40 - Why leave Romania
00:18:45 - Finding mentor Kieran
00:20:05 - Arriving with £3,100
00:26:00 - How to choose courses wisely
00:26:45 - The occlusion eureka moment
00:32:05 - Why not endodontics in the UK
00:37:35 - Moving to Peterborough
00:42:45 - Building from zero patients
00:44:00 - Favourite courses and lecturers
00:52:40 - Communication beats clinical skill
00:58:15 - Growing up under Ceaușescu
01:08:25 - Losing his mother at 14
01:14:20 - Volunteering in trauma
01:17:10 - Near-death experiences
01:24:50 - Blackbox thinking
01:35:40 - Fantasy dinner party
01:41:55 - Last days and legacy
About Alex Buciu
Alex qualified in Romania in 2004 and built a successful endodontics-focused practice before moving to Northern Ireland in 2018, later settling in Peterborough. He works as a private associate, focusing on restorative dentistry, occlusion and TMD, with a particular passion for continuous education and patient communication. Despite significant personal challenges, including arriving in the UK with minimal resources, he's built a reputation as an excellence-driven clinician who believes communication matters more than clinical perfection.

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