Steven Bornfeld,
>> I just had a super-erupted wisdom tooth extracted. After leaving his >> office, I noticed that the 2nd molar was sharp, and on further [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] >> reasonable rather than legal advice? Should I expect the dentist to >> fix this for free, or chip in for part of the restoration?
> The answer depends upon the state of the tooth. If it is a small > sharp edge it may just need to be smoothed--no biggie. If this is a [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > the next tooth might be considered a normal risk of the extraction, > while a major fracture leading to the loss of the second molar would not. How should such a major fracture be handled? What is a second molar worth on the open market?! What would be a fair settlement?
> If the tooth was considered a candidate for a crown beforehand, It was by another dentist, but I'd rather wait as long as practical to have my teeth last as long as I do. Most of these have big cracks but are not broken (yet), and I presume that once the amalgam is dug out and the tooth is crowned, that it will abscess in 15-20 years or so like the last one I did, because of leakage through the crack, and have to be pulled then. I expect to be around for more than 20 years, but who knows.
> I > don't think the small chip changes the situation, though you may think > about having it done now. You didn't cover any of the interesting cases - where substantial repair may now be needed that wasn't needed before the extraction. To my untrained eye, this looks like a good candidate for some sort of an inlay/onlay to replace the massive old amalgam, which now has a groove the length of the tooth that I can stick the end of my fingernail into leading from the point of damage. How do you deal with expensive repairs to dentist-caused damage?
There has been much commentary here about the stress of dentistry, obnoxious patients, etc. How does a patient go about NOT being obnoxious yet still be treated fairly (whatever that is).
I was considering going in for a routine examination of the tooth without first mentioning the extracted tooth and see what he says. If HE decides that it needs expensive repair, then open the discussion as to who pays what to have it done. Perhaps fair would be for me to cover his out-of-pocket expenses, but have him work for free in repairing the tooth that he damaged.
What do YOU think would be fair?
Steve Richfie1d
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