I stumbled upon 'Little and Falace's Dental Management' during my third year of practice, and it quickly became a staple on my reference shelf. What sets it apart is its blend of clinical wisdom and real-world practice management—something many textbooks gloss over. The chapters on patient communication strategies helped me refine my approach to anxious patients, especially kids, and the financial planning sections saved me from rookie billing mistakes. It’s not just theory; the case studies feel ripped from actual clinic dramas, like handling no-shows or balancing ethics with profitability.
That said, it’s dense. I wouldn’t recommend binge-reading it cover to cover. Instead, I treat it like a troubleshooting manual—flipping to relevant sections when I hit a snag. The updated editions include telehealth considerations, which feels timely. If you’re fresh out of school, it’s gold. For seasoned dentists? Still worth skimming for those ‘aha’ moments about workflow tweaks.
I initially dismissed this as ‘MBA fluff.’ Then I actually ran a clinic. The chapter on time management—mapping out chair turnover without sacrificing care—changed my daily rhythm. Their templates for inventory control cut my supply costs by 15%. It’s not glamorous, but neither is dentistry’s paperwork grind. The ethics dilemmas section alone justifies the price tag; it tackles everything from overtreatment guilt to handling drug-seeking patients with empathy. A must-read if you view dentistry as both craft and business.
My clinic partner swears by this book, but personally, I think its value depends on where you’re at in your career. The practice management tips? Solid—especially if you’re opening your own office and need to navigate insurance labyrinths. But some sections, like staffing models, felt overly optimistic compared to post-pandemic hiring chaos. I dog-eared the risk management chapter though; their breakdown of malpractice scenarios is hauntingly thorough.
Where it shines is bridging the gap between dentist-as-clinician and dentist-as-business-owner. The dental marketing section taught me to reframe services in patient-centric language (no more ‘occlusal adjustments,’ just ‘comfortable chewing’). Just don’t expect lyrical prose—it’s a dry read that pairs well with coffee and highlighters.
2026-02-01 03:54:43
3
View All Answers
Scan code to download App
Related Books
Dom and little Academy
Cendrillon1996
9.5
135.6K
The year is 2996 the world went through some major changes, vampires are now a thing. Human aren't enslaved well maybe just a little, at the age of 16 all human get tested mentally and divided to categories: Dom/Sub , Daddy/Little , Mommy/little , Master/Pet , Master/slave.Sophia a 16 y old who's gonna just find out which category she is. Dimitri a vampire prince and well known dom.Well you'll have to read it to know what happens next. This is A DDLG Book , with MAJOR DADDY KINK in it.You've been warned. Apologies for any misspelling and grammar mistakes.
This book is a series of the most erotic stimulating stories.
Consisting of several different fantasies and scenarios,Teacher and student,coach and player,erotic age gap scenes,office sex scenes,step dad and daughter and as a bonus even some paranormal dirty scenes(Beastxhuman,werewolf breeding,tentacles) etc.
Dive into Dirty little secrets,and remember it’s a secret.
Hush!!
Hot & Owned: Billionaire Edition(short story collection)
Flimxy vic
10
3.1K
Warning: This collection contains explicit adult content, including intense power dynamics, dominance/submission, dubious consent themes in fantasy context, BDSM elements, age-gap scenarios, breeding kink, group play undertones, and graphic sexual situations. All stories feature consenting adults in fictional scenarios.
In this scorching anthology, eight ruthless, ultra-wealthy billionaires each claim total ownership over the woman who enters their world—whether through debt, auction, obsession, or sheer predatory desire. Every novella stands alone, delivering a different flavor of erotic heat while threading the addictive "owned by the billionaire" fantasy throughout. Dive into whichever kink calls to you... or devour them all.
Talia works in a company, it’s a secret matching companies, they are known for BDSM matching, you can find your future submissive from any kind, training courses, clothing, toys, and anything you want or imagine.
She saw many things, she saw all kind of BDSM relations, in one impulsive moment she decided to tries what she works in, and who else is better than her own friends to try with. That left her with a traumatic experience, she hate everything related to BDSM and being submissive, she’s neither, and if she could afford leaving this whole place she would.
Marco, he’s a daddy dominant, a trainer, and recruiter, he had his eyes on a special girl in his workplace, he knew she’s a little even if she didn’t yet. He wants her, but is he too hurt and traumatized to accept what he have planned for her.
This is my way to deal with my depression, read it if you want, I’ll be grateful for you.
This is a DDLG/ABDL/CGL story, you’ve been warned.
Apologies for any misspelling and grammar mistakes.
Dr. Clara Evans lives by one rule: Save everyone.
But when Dante Moretti—billionaire tycoon and the city’s most feared Mafia leader—stumbles into her ER drenched in blood and bullet holes, she realizes some lives come with a price. She saved his heart from stopping, but she didn’t realize he was already planning to steal hers.
When Clara’s brother gambles away his life to the wrong people, Dante offers a deal signed in shadows: The debt is cleared, but Clara belongs to him for six months.
You think medical school is all anatomy labs and stethoscopes?
Yeah, me too. That's what I signed up for.
Instead, I got her. Or maybe, I got them.
Orientation day. First hour. I was just trying to survive the college officer's speech about not doing drugs. Then the door opened. Three guys who looked like they bench-pressed fun. And a girl with the face of a doll and a voice that could make you forget your own name.
Amaye.
I had a boyfriend named Donald who was supposed to be in Europe, but he only called when I was about to make bad decisions.
And I kept making them.
Seven years of medical school. Seven years of tests, assignments, deadlines, and the hottest friend group on campus. I thought I was becoming a doctor. Turns out I was becoming something else entirely.
This is my story. Or maybe it's a confession. I haven't decided yet. But I wrote it all down because someone needed to see med school through a different lens.
I didn't see it through a lens. I lived it.
#medical chaos
#reverseharem
#girlpower
Books like 'Little and Falace’s Dental Management' are absolute game-changers for students diving into dentistry. The way it breaks down complex clinical scenarios into digestible, practical advice makes it feel like having a mentor right beside you. I remember lugging it around during my early rotations—its chapters on patient communication and risk assessment were lifesavers when I was nervously fumbling through my first interactions. It doesn’t just dump theory on you; it ties everything to real-world applications, like handling anxious patients or navigating ethical dilemmas.
What’s even cooler is how it balances depth with accessibility. Unlike some textbooks that read like encyclopedias, this one uses case studies and flowcharts to make concepts stick. I still flip through it sometimes for quick refreshers, especially the sections on emergency protocols. If you’re a visual learner, the diagrams alone are worth it. Honestly, it’s one of those rare books that grows with you, from clueless student to slightly less clueless professional.