Getting patients to approve recommended dental treatment plans is essential for growing a thriving, profitable practice. However, many obstacles commonly deter patients from moving forward with ideal proposed care.
Cost concerns, misunderstanding the value of procedures, confusing plan presentations, overlooked urgency, and general anxiety are some of the biggest barriers dentists face when seeking treatment plan acceptance.
Without a strategic approach to proactively addressing these roadblocks, your case acceptance rates will always lag behind potential. You sacrifice practice production and patients miss out on necessary oral care.
Implementing key best practices can systematically break down the obstacles holding back your dental treatment plan conversion. This article outlines proven tactics for overcoming the major hurdles.
Challenge #1: Sticker Shock from Treatment Cost
One of the most common reasons patients decline treatment plans is perceived high cost and affordability concerns, especially for extensive care like implants, orthodontics, or full-mouth restorations. They experience “sticker shock” from the total price tag.
Overcome it by:
- Providing clear pricing upfront so patients aren’t blindsided by cost
- Breaking down payment options like payment plans, insurance coverage, discounted cash pricing
- Offering “good, better, best” treatment plan options at different price points
- Highlighting cost savings of addressing needs now vs. future interventions
- Having financial coordinators fully review finances and arrange budget-friendly solutions
Present costs in writing along with available payment methods, financing offers, and insurance claim estimates. Make payment discussions a standard part of the consultation process before patients balk at surprises.
Emphasize affordability by stressing flexible payment plans interest-free over 6-12 months and discounted pricing for paying at time of service. Present costs as manageable solutions rather than large upfront bills.
Challenge #2: Not Understanding the Value
Patients also decline treatments because they do not fully recognize the value of the recommended procedures. They lack context on how it improves health and functionality.
Overcome it by:
- Thoroughly explaining the “why” behind treatments and how they address specific oral health risks and problems
- Using visual aids to show patients their oral health issues before/after treatment
- Tying treatment benefits to broader lifestyle goals around confidence, nutrition, activity level, reduced future healthcare costs
- Leveraging patient testimonials that tout the positive benefits of accepting care
- Avoiding industry jargon and using easy-to-understand layman explanations
Illustrating the value of treatment requires showing patients how procedures will personally enhance their oral and overall health, confidence, and quality of life. Relate benefits to patient priorities using clear language and visual demonstrations.
Challenge #3: Poor Presentation of the Treatment Plan
Unclear, overwhelming, or incomplete presentation of proposed treatment plans leaves patients confused and unlikely to proceed.
Overcome it by:
- Walking patients step-by-step through their condition assessments and recommended treatments
- Avoiding technical terms whenever possible and explaining dental procedures simply
- Limiting initial presentation to the 2-3 top priority items to avoid information overload
- Providing documentation like summaries that reiterate the treatment plan with costs/scheduling
- Ensuring adequate time is reserved for unrushed consultations without distractions
- Answering all patient questions and addressing any concerns transparently
Present treatment plans in phases when extensive work is involved. Explain why you prioritize specific interventions first based on oral health factors and the patient’s chief complaints. Welcome all patient questions.
Thorough, patient-centered presentations focused on care value and education provide the clarity patients need to confidently approve treatment plans.
Challenge #4: Not Perceiving Urgency
When treatment plans involve procedures patients don’t consider urgent, like restorations, they are inclined to delay or decline due to lack of perceived immediacy.
Overcome it by:
- Emphasizing risks and potential complications if treatment is postponed or declined
- Using visuals to illustrate structural damage and unhealthy areas getting worse over time without intervention
- Providing clinical evidence/measurements like bone loss for periodontitis to showcase progression
- Warning of higher costs, treatment intensity, and longevity issues if addressing later vs. now
- Setting short-term reevaluation appointments to monitor untreated situations
- Following up between visits to reinforce urgency of scheduling care
Patients underestimate the importance of preventative, restorative, and elective treatments. Bring home the message of addressing issues proactively. Otherwise, they fall into the “out of sight, out of mind” trap once they leave your office.
Challenge #5: Decision Anxiety and Analysis Paralysis
Some patients struggle deciding on treatment plans due to general decision anxiety. Too many options, switching priorities, and fear of choosing the “wrong” path can lead to analysis paralysis.
Overcome it by:
- Presenting only 2-3 focused options instead of an overwhelming menu of choices
- Guiding patients based on their chief complaints to the optimal treatment plan for their needs
- Standing confident behind your top recommendation as the ideal care pathway
- Limiting plan details initially to what addresses immediate top priorities vs. a full long-term overview
- Following up promptly to answer questions, provide reassurance, and keep the process moving
For anxious patients, limiting choices and offering clear guidance around optimal treatments is best. Avoid framing plans as equal options for the patient to puzzle over alone. Be their trusted advisor and steer them positively toward ideal care.
Challenge #6: Previous Bad Dental Experiences
Some patients decline treatment due to fear, skepticism or lack of confidence rooted in previous negative dental visits.
Overcome it by:
- Asking about any past uncomfortable or painful experiences to understand existing barriers
- Clearly explaining what you will do to prevent or minimize discomfort at every step
- Offering anxiety reduction assistance like nitrous or oral sedation to ease concerns
- Introducing patients to all equipment you will use so they understand sensations
- Welcoming patients to signal any discomfort so you can immediately adjust during procedures
- Following up after visits to address any lingering concerns and improve future experiences
Identify dental phobias upfront and detail how your approach will be different – more educational, more gentle, faster, less painful. The goal is demonstrating your commitment to truly painless dentistry.
Challenge #7: No Perceived Problem
Patients without obvious pain, discomfort or other immediately pressing issues commonly delay or refuse preventative, restorative and minor treatments.
Overcome it by:
- Focusing treatment plan presentation on health risks and complication possibilities if problems go unaddressed
- Using images and clinical data to illustrate structural issues not readily visible or felt by patients like small cavities or periodontal disease progression
- Explaining how addressing small problems now prevents larger more invasive, costly interventions later
- Not waiting for patients to complain of pain – be proactive showcasing issues you see clinically
- Following up with patients to book appointments before they leave the office without scheduling needed care
Patients who don’t perceive any obvious functional issues often brush off “preemptive” treatments as unnecessary or defer scheduling. Bring hidden risks to light through diagnostics. Emphasize future implications of declining procedures today.
Challenge #8: Option Overload and Choice Fatigue
Too many options presented with unclear guidance can paralyze patients. Simplify choices.
Present two to three prioritized options such as:
- Only urgent needs
- Urgent plus high benefits like implant vs. bridge
- Comprehensive everything
Explain pros/cons and your recommended path. Guide patients based on their chief complaint. Avoid overwhelming with overly customized plans when simpler choices suffice. Limiting options helps patients decide confidently.
Conclusion
Implementing these proven tactics will systematically break down the biggest obstacles deterring dental treatment plan acceptance. While challenges inevitably arise, taking a proactive consultative approach focused on education, transparency, value communication, and patient nurturing will overcome hurdles.
Refine your presentation skills and office workflows to remove every barrier possible. By embracing Automated Treatment Plan Reminders like mConsent, your practice will be on its way to higher case conversion, better financial performance, increased production, and improved oral health outcomes.