I’m hearing is only temporary, hope to reopen in the fall. I hope that is NOT possible by the time fall gets here!
Isn’t Oklahoma where that waterboarding dentist, Megann Scott worked?
I’m hearing is only temporary, hope to reopen in the fall. I hope that is NOT possible by the time fall gets here!
Isn’t Oklahoma where that waterboarding dentist, Megann Scott worked?
Someone found this on the Internet and sent it to me. I felt it absolutely should be reposted as it is yet another picture of what is happening right under our noses and we all need to wake up from our peaceful slumber:
We will soon see a massive influx of foreign-trained dentists. While everything else has been outsourced, the last majorly unaffected areas of the American economy are health care and the service sector. By virtue of the logic that health care not be outsourced, we as a profession were complacent.
2007 $399,000,000
2008 $768,000,000
2009 $961,000,000
2010 $1,235,000,000
In essence, Medicaid expenditures in Texas for dental services have gone up 300% in 4 years. I suppose it’s a case of out of control kids going to sleep with Sippy cups. Or theft on a monumental scale. No wonder every dentist in the country wants to come to Texas to make his/her fortune!
Actually you don’t have to actually be a dentist to profit, just hire one. I’m packing now, look out Texas, here I come.
Section 5 page 6 of Texas Medicaid and CHIP 8th edition – January 2011
Yet today, Texas announced it was “expanding” it’s Medicaid spending for dental care! Texas taxpayers, your Texas government has lost it’s ever lovin’ mind!
Here ya go, Texas, bend over! Oh wait, sorry, you already are bent over, well, stand back up and do it again.
May 29, 2011 4:10 PM CDT Sunday,
May 29, 2011 5:10 PM EST
By DAN SEWELL
Associated Press
DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Herman Williams came home safely after fighting in the jungles of Vietnam as a Marine. He was shocked to learn four decades later that his military service had again placed him in jeopardy - this time, because he got a tooth pulled.
Williams is among 13,000 U.S. veterans who have been warned in the last two years that their blood should be tested for potentially fatal infections after possible exposures by improper hygiene practices at five VA hospitals in Ohio, Florida, Georgia, Missouri and Tennessee. This Memorial Day finds the Department of Veterans Affairs under political fire and numerous veterans upset after enduring fear and uncertainty over their health.
California Population 36,961,664
Texas Population 24,782,302
Difference 12,179,362
How do you explain this!
How do you explain how one Texas dentist, all by himself, was paid $22 million. This is 1.16 times as much as the entire state of California has budgeted! One dentist!!
Yes, Carlos Navarro, and his Orthodonix center brought home 1.16 times as much of your tax dollars as the whole state of California used.
“Centers that achieved business performance bonuses must verify Compliance criteria, A/R criteria, and supply budget criteria.”
I have a whole lot of problems with the above. Don’t you? First, even having a bonus program structured on production breaks all Compliance criteria!!!! Get this, they are starting a pilot program in one of the Ohio clinics to base the hygienist pay on production.
Second, is the “supply budget criteria”. This is where they don’t change rubber gloves, reuse disposable nose pieces for the Nitrous. Like use only 3 a day!! This is where the tubes used for suction, which are also disposable, are reused throughout the day! This is where the infection starts and this is where this shit needs to end!
It’s a damn shame he’s retiring and not having his dental licenses revoked as it should be.
Friday May 27, 2011
By KELLY METZ
kmetz@MorningJournal.comELYRIA — Dr. Henry Mazorow, the dentist performing oral surgery when a 13-year-old patient became ill and later died, has announced he will voluntarily retire from practicing effective Sept. 1.
Marissa Kingery died from the lack of oxygen to the brain, Cuyahoga County Coroner’s Office spokesman Powell Caesar said. Powell could not provide further comment about the results, but did say the death was accidental.
Kingery, of Elyria, was having baby teeth removed in Mazorow’s office on Dec. 21, 2010, when she was rushed to Mercy Regional Medical Center. She was later taken to Rainbow Babies and Childrens Hospital in Cleveland and placed on life support, but never recovered. She died Jan. 3.
Mazorow, who has an office at 209 W. 21st St., Lorain, appeared before the Ohio State Dental Board this week and announced he would be retiring, according to dental board records. While his official retirement date is set for Sept. 1, he has also agreed to limit his dental practice by not administering any form of general anesthesia or conscious sedation to any patient in the interim.
According to the voluntary retirement form, Mazorow made the decision to retire last month.
Mazorow announced he would stop using general anesthesia in January following Kingery’s death, his attorney Ron Mingus has said. Mingus could not be reached for comment yesterday.
Mazorow has been practicing since 1956. There are no disciplinary actions on his record.
Mazorow’s office declined comment yesterday.