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50 : Stop Plugging In Software. The Real Technology Problem in Dentistry Is Human.


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In this episode, Adrian Lefler sits down with Melissa Turner, co-founder of the National Mobile and Teledentistry Conference and the American Mobile and Teledentistry Alliance. Melissa brings 20 years of clinical experience, has worked in over 100 dental practices across the country, and has spent the last decade helping dental teams and practice owners close the gap between buying a tool and actually changing how they work. Her lens is teledentistry, but the framework applies to every piece of technology coming into the modern dental practice, including AI tools, online scheduling, and virtual care platforms.

If you're a dentist, hygienist, or dental team leader trying to figure out why implementation keeps failing even when the technology is good, this episode is for you.

WHAT YOU'LL LEARN

  • Why dental technology rarely saves time but can save energy and shift how that time is used
  • How teledentistry is a retention strategy for baby boomer patients who are losing mobility
  • Why online scheduling is not optional if you want new patients to actually book
  • How to structure a teledentistry afternoon so the doctor is only needed for two to three minutes
  • Why the real barrier to technology adoption is mindset, not software
  • How mobile dentistry can triple patient volume without adding square footage
  • What front desk team members should hear when a new system takes over part of their job

ABOUT MELISSA TURNER

Melissa Turner is a hygienist, clinician consultant, and co-founder of the National Mobile and Teledentistry Conference and the American Mobile and Teledentistry Alliance, a 501(c)(4) membership organization. With two decades of experience working across more than 100 dental practices nationwide, Melissa helps dental teams and practice owners understand what technology adoption actually costs before it pays off, and how to implement change in a way that sticks. She is one of the most direct voices in the dental industry on the gap between buying a tool and building a team that can actually use it.

COMPANIES AND RESOURCES MENTIONED

  • American Mobile and Teledentistry Alliance: https://www.amda.net/
  • National Mobile and Teledentistry Conference: https://nmdconference.com/
  • American Dental Association (ADA): https://www.ada.org

ADDITIONAL EDUCATION

  • https://mysocialpractice.com/2026/06/culture-by-design-byte-sized/
  • https://mysocialpractice.com/2026/05/dental-ai-resistance-byte-sized/
  • https://mysocialpractice.com/2026/05/ai-healthcare-byte-sized-pod/

CONTACT INFO

Guest: Melissa Turner

Email: [email protected]

Website: www.melissakturner.com

Host: Adrian Lefler

Website: https://mysocialpractice.com

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#Teledentistry #DentalTechnology #DentalPracticeGrowth #DentalMarketing #MobileDentistry #AIinDentistry #Dentistry

TERMS AND TRANSLATIONS

Teledentistry

The practice of delivering dental consultations, follow-ups, and some clinical services using video, phone, or digital communication rather than requiring a patient to come into the office. The ADA recognizes two CDT-coded categories: synchronous (live face-to-face video) and asynchronous (store-and-forward, where information is reviewed later by the diagnosing provider).

Synchronous Teledentistry

A real-time, face-to-face virtual appointment between a dentist and patient, typically via video call. Billed in addition to the procedure codes for whatever clinical work is performed during the visit. Think of it as a virtual operatory visit where both parties are present at the same time.

Asynchronous Teledentistry (Store-and-Forward)

A care delivery model where a team member collects patient information, photos, or records at one time, and the diagnosing provider reviews and responds at a later time. This allows the dentist to evaluate cases without being physically present or on a live call. Common in mobile and remote care settings.

Mobile Dentistry

Dental care delivered outside of a brick-and-mortar practice, using portable equipment or a mobile unit to bring services directly to patients in homes, assisted living facilities, workplaces, or community settings. Distinct from teledentistry in that care is delivered in person, but off-site.

CDT Codes

Current Dental Terminology codes, maintained by the ADA, are the billing and procedure codes used in dentistry. Teledentistry has two specific CDT codes that allow practices to bill for virtual care services, making it reimbursable in many states.

Online Scheduling

A patient-facing booking tool that allows new and existing patients to schedule appointments without calling the office or waiting for a callback. Practices that implement online scheduling often see significant increases in new patient volume, particularly from patients who search and want to book outside of business hours.

Baby Boomer Retention

A strategy for keeping older patients, specifically those born between 1946 and 1964, active in a dental practice as their mobility decreases. Teledentistry and mobile dentistry are particularly well-suited for this population as they age into reduced independence and find it harder to travel to appointments.

Technology Implementation Gap

The period between when a dental practice purchases a new tool and when the team is actually using it well. This gap is the source of most technology frustration in dental practices and is driven more by mindset and team readiness than by the software itself.

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Byte SizedBy Adrian Lefler