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Medical Forum / General / Dentistry / January 2005

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Recent topics this morning 01/10/2005

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Joel M. Eichen - 10 Jan 2005 16:27 GMT
You are welcome to get the material and bring it back to
sci.med.dentistry, if it interests you.

Joel

What is RSSBot?

We are using Syndicated Feeds to bring in dental topics for
discussions.

Joel

www.DentalCom.Net

Under new posts.

[BDJ] Direct restorations, endodontics and bleaching
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] The provision of dental care for patients with natural rubber
latex allergy: Are patients able to obtain safe care?
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Contemporary dental practice in the UK: aspects of direct
restorations, endodontics and bleaching
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Christmas prize draw
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Fun oral hygiene
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] New dye launched
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] New booklet for teenagers launched
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Range of casting alloys
RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Odourless tablet
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by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Futuristic restoratives
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Quick set
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Permanent bond
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Natural match
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Drill with a twist
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Risk management in general dental practice
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Preventive materials, methods and programs
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Orthodontic concepts and strategies
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by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] Behind you!
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
  [BDJ] J. M. W. Turner's painting The unpaid bill, or the dentist
reproving his son's prodigality
RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
by RSSBot   0 1 News
Joel M. Eichen - 10 Jan 2005 16:32 GMT
>You are welcome to get the material and bring it back to
>sci.med.dentistry, if it interests you.
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
>Under new posts.

>   [BDJ] J. M. W. Turner's painting The unpaid bill, or the dentist
>reproving his son's prodigality
>RSSBot  Today 10:58 AM
>by RSSBot   0 1 News

Sample:

ABSTRACT


British Dental Journal (2004); 197, 757–762. doi:
10.1038/sj.bdj.4811906


J. M. W. Turner's painting The unpaid bill, or the dentist reproving
his son's prodigality

M. Bishop1, S. Gelbier2 and J. King3




1Queen Anne House, 2a St Andrew Street, Hertford, SG14 1JA
2The Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, 24 Eversholt
Street, London NW1 1AD
3St Bart's and the Royal London, Department of Human Science and
Medical Ethics, Turner Street, London E1 2AD


Correspondence to: Malcolm Bishop, Queen Anne House, 2a St Andrew
Street, Hertford, SG14 1JA




Received Date 06.10.03; Accepted Date 15.01.04

In November 2002, the BDA News carried an item,1 illustrated with a
colour reproduction, describing a painting of a Georgian dentist's
rooms by Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851), one of the most
respected of English artists, which was shortly to come up for auction
at Christies' Rooms in London. This work, first exhibited in 1808, was
entitled The unpaid bill, or the dentist reproving his son's
prodigality (Fig. 1), and had originally been commissioned by the
connoisseur Richard Payne Knight (1750-1824). The examiner, a
contemporary London journal, identifies the 'cradle-piece' for the
commission as being a Rembrandt which Payne Knight owned, and the
journalist Robert Hunt said that Turner had more than come up to the
task of showing that a modern could handle light as well as the old
master,2 'for a picture of colouring and effect, it is ...
inestimable'.3


Table of contents  Previous abstract  -
Joel M. Eichen - 10 Jan 2005 16:35 GMT
JAN DREW!

You are toast!

Get busy kiddo.

Joel

Conclusions For the practitioners in this survey, amalgam was the most
frequently selected direct restorative material.

*****

>You are welcome to get the material and bring it back to
>sci.med.dentistry, if it interests you.
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
>
>Under new posts.

>   [BDJ] Contemporary dental practice in the UK: aspects of direct
>restorations, endodontics and bleaching
>RSSBot  Today 11:00 AM
>by RSSBot   0 1 News

Objectives To investigate by questionnaire, the use and selection of
materials and techniques for the placement of direct restorations and
the provision of endodontics and bleaching by dental practitioners in
the North West of England and Scotland.

Methods A questionnaire was sent to 1,000 general dental practitioners
selected at random from dentists in Scotland and the North West of
England. Non-responders were sent another questionnaire after a period
of 4 weeks had elapsed.

Results A total of 701 usable questionnaires were returned, giving a
response rate of 70%. The most commonly used material for the
restoration of Class II cavities in premolar and permanent molar teeth
was amalgam (n = 605, 86%) and (n = 634, 90%) respectively. Many
practitioners (n = 419, 60%) felt amalgam should continue to be used
but a majority (n = 374, 66%) remained unconvinced about the merits of
amalgam bonding. A minority (n = 63, 9%) of practitioners used
predominantly directly placed resin composite rather than amalgam to
restore Class II cavities in premolar and permanent molar teeth.
Home-based vital bleaching was provided by a significant number (n =
245, 35%) of practitioners with only 18% (n = 123) providing
practice-based bleaching. The most commonly used endodontic obturation
technique was cold lateral condensation (n = 527, 75%) with 61% (n =
425) of respondents not using rubber dam routinely for endodontics.

Conclusions For the practitioners in this survey, amalgam was the most
frequently selected direct restorative material. Few practitioners
used amalgam bonding let alone direct resin composite for posterior
restorations. Home-based rather than practice-based bleaching
procedures were preferred, as were more traditional endodontic
obturation techniques.
Gregory P. Cole, B.S., D.D.S. \(Flap\) - 10 Jan 2005 19:42 GMT
Joel...hahahha

I don't know if you or the RSS bot are the bigger of the spammers!

Don't you think you need dentist readership at DentalCom and dentist posters
and not so many posts from bots?

Signature

Gregory P. Cole, B.S., D.D.S. (Flap)
www.smilesforalifetime.com
Flaps Dental Blog
http://flapsblog.blogspot.com/
Liberae sunt nostrae cogitationes

> JAN DREW!
>
[quoted text clipped - 61 lines]
> procedures were preferred, as were more traditional endodontic
> obturation techniques.
Joel M. Eichen - 10 Jan 2005 20:23 GMT
>Joel...hahahha
>
>I don't know if you or the RSS bot are the bigger of the spammers!

The RSSBots can never catch me!

>Don't you think you need dentist readership at DentalCom and dentist posters
>and not so many posts from bots?

Well, we tuned it down a bit ...... the RSSBot was going crazy this
morning!

One can limit the number of posts.

For those who have not guessed, RSS-Bot posts automatically .. dental
topics!

Then its up to us to make it look liek a real live person
conversation! This is in anticipation of offloading to UNWIRED devices
about which Greg has already told you.

This will be orted to older cells phones as well in WML format.

NOT DentalNews either.

This is about filling cancelled appointments in your own office!

Each dentist has a private channel and the news about a cancellation
is beamed into the doctor's patients' cell phones!

Joel

Joel
Gregory P. Cole, B.S., D.D.S. \(Flap\) - 10 Jan 2005 21:28 GMT
See my previous post..... don't see the value here with this service.... and
who gets paid for it?

Signature

Gregory P. Cole, B.S., D.D.S. (Flap)
www.smilesforalifetime.com
Flaps Dental Blog
http://flapsblog.blogspot.com/
Liberae sunt nostrae cogitationes

>>Joel...hahahha
>>
[quoted text clipped - 30 lines]
>
> Joel
Joel M. Eichen - 10 Jan 2005 21:51 GMT
>See my previous post..... don't see the value here with this service.... and
>who gets paid for it?

This is just in the idea stages .......

Will it generate cash? Maybe yes, maybe no.

I suspect that people will require so much free trial that the cash
flow will not be there .....

Joel'
 
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