Dr. Eric Block: What do you think makes dentistry, uh, one of the most stressful professions out there? And then just a, uh, a tag on that question. Did you notice any differences from the different, uh, when you’re in different countries getting treatment? Or was it a lot of similarities?
Dr. Ben Bernstein: Um, that’s, that’s a really good question. I have to think about that a little bit more. Um, for the most part, it’s quite similar. I mean, culturally, of course, there are differences about how people are talked to and treated and things like that. But, um, the first part of your question about what is it that makes dentistry so particularly stressful—so in the healthcare professions, um, of which, you know, you are and I am, um, the focus is on the interaction with the patient.
And dentists have a very limited interaction with the patient because you’re working on their mouth—hard to communicate. Um, that’s one thing. The other thing is, and in my experience—and now my experience is limited to the dental schools that I’ve worked in, and I have worked in two different ones, so I can’t make this as a categorical statement and I won’t—but in my experience, the students aren’t really trained to deal, really trained to deal with the more human aspect of dentistry.
Dr. Ben Bernstein: The interactive aspect, let me put it that way. So what makes dentistry particularly stressful is that a dentist will come in and, you know, Mr. Jones will be sitting in the chair, grabbing onto the arms, and the dentist will say, "Oh, Mr. Jones, how are you doing?" And he’ll say, "I’m good, I’m good."
But what’s really happening, that I discovered, is that the dentist often—not always, but often—has a front of "How are you, Mr. Jones?" but inside the dentist is actually feeling what Mr. Jones is feeling. Okay? So there’s a psychological term—I think I may have coined it—called the "induced reaction," which is that sensitive healthcare people actually get induced into the state of the patient.
Which diagnostically can be very helpful to realize Mr. Jones is freaked out and he doesn’t want to be here, and all of those things. But you don’t want to pick that up and hold that, because what happens for a dentist—and I’ve heard this innumerable times in workshops that I give all over America—there’s a split between "Hi, Mr. Jones," and what’s going on inside.
And that split is very, very hard to manage. I mean, that split itself is quite stressful—that you’re doing two things at once. So I would say that’s the more personal part of dental practice.
Dr. Ben Bernstein: You have to run a business. You have to manage a staff. These are not skills—they may be touched on, and most dental schools will do some kind of work on that—but running a business and managing a staff are very different kinds of skills than, you know, than basically microsurgery that you’re doing in a person’s mouth.
And so, I’m sure you know as well as any dentist that office dynamics and, um, what people come into work with—not only yourself, but your hygienists, your assistants, your office people—it’s a lot of work. And then the overhead is so high, and insurance, and we can just keep adding it on and on and on.
Plus, often when people get out of dental school, they’re starting a business. They may even be building a building. They may be starting a family, and it just, you know, one thing leads to the next. So the pressures really do build up.
When I used to travel around the country for the ADA as a speaker, I would look out on the audience and I would just see so many people who looked tired, you know, and who looked really kind of worn down—and some, a fair degree of unhealthy-looking people. And, you know, in a healthcare profession, you want to be healthy. I mean, you want your practitioners to be healthy, right?
So, yeah. All of those reasons—it makes it, it’s a very, it’s a unique profession in that way. And I don’t think people realize the complications and intricacies of running a practice, of being a dentist. And I’m talking about general dentists. When you get into the specialists, you know, it’s about other aspects of that as well.