Dental Treatment Plan Case Acceptance — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
The Dental Case Acceptance Reboot is a 60-minute training for dental treatment coordinators, hygienists, and dentists that replaces the price-first "here's your estimate" handoff with a disciplined four-part conversation: connect the recommended treatment to what the patient told you they care about, present the clinical case before the number, normalize financing as a routine option, and ask for the decision with a clear next step.
Built on Paul Homoly's "Making It Easy for Patients to Say Yes," the patient-communication research summarized by the American Dental Association, and Levin Group practice-management benchmarks, this session teaches the clinical team to raise case acceptance by leading with the patient's own words and the dentist's diagnosis — because patients say no to a price they don't understand and yes to a problem they want solved.
Section 1 — Why Treatment Plans Get Declined (5 min)
Open the huddle with the data. In Levin Group practice benchmarks, the average general practice presents far more dentistry than it completes — and most of the gap is communication, not money. Paul Homoly is blunt: patients decline treatment they don't understand and can't connect to a problem they feel.
The American Dental Association's patient-communication guidance adds that trust and clarity drive acceptance more than discounts. The coordinator who leads with the dollar amount frames dentistry as an expense, not a solution.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The old handoff: "The doctor recommends a crown, that'll be $1,400 — do you want to schedule?"
- The new conversation: Connect to the patient's stated concern, present the clinical case, then the investment, then financing, then the ask.
- The metric: Track same-day case acceptance and total-treatment acceptance — coach to both.
End the segment by reading the rule aloud: *"Patients don't buy crowns. They buy chewing without pain and a smile they're not hiding."*
Section 2 — The Pre-Presentation Setup (15 min)
Before any case presentation, the coordinator captures what the patient already told the team. No patient concern documented, no presentation. Walk the room through the template — have the team fill it out for a real patient on tomorrow's schedule.
Verbatim Case-Presentation Prep Template (coordinator fills out before the conversation):
- Patient: [Name] — [Recommended treatment] — [Total investment]
- What the patient said they care about: [Their words — "I don't want to lose this tooth," "my wedding is in May"]
- The clinical "why now": [What happens if untreated — in the dentist's terms, patient-friendly]
- The visual: [X-ray, intraoral photo, or model to show — patients accept what they can see]
- Financing to present: [In-house plan / third-party — presented as routine, not a rescue]
- The next step I'll ask for: [Schedule today / reserve the appointment / sequence the phases]
Coach the team on the "their words first" rule — Homoly's method opens with the patient's own stated concern, not the diagnosis. If a coordinator wants to lead with "the doctor found decay," push back: *"Start with what they told us they want. Then the diagnosis is the answer to their problem, not a sales pitch."*
Show the bad example: *"So the total comes to $3,200 — how would you like to pay?"* That frames dentistry as a transaction and invites "let me think about it."
Section 3 — The Lead-With-Value Rule (10 min)
The discipline that lifts acceptance. Drill it with the clinical team.
- Show, don't just tell. Put the X-ray or intraoral photo on the screen — visible problems get treated.
- Use the patient's words. "You told me chewing on the left hurts — here's why and here's the fix."
- Present the case before the number. The diagnosis and the "why now" come first, every time.
- Normalize financing. "Most patients spread this over monthly payments" — said matter-of-factly, not as a rescue.
- Stop talking after the ask. Present, ask, then be quiet and let the patient decide.
The one exception: If the patient has an urgent clinical concern (pain, infection), lead with relief and urgency — the financing conversation comes after the "let's get you out of pain today."
What to NEVER say in a case presentation (read these aloud, slowly):
- "It's expensive, I know." (you just agreed it's not worth it)
- "You don't have to do it all today." (offered before they've said yes to anything — invites delay)
- "Insurance probably won't cover much." (leads with a negative; frame coverage as a bonus, not a barrier)
- "Whatever you want to do is fine." (signals the treatment is optional, not needed)
- "Let me know if you have questions later." (ends the conversation with no decision)
- Anything that apologizes for the fee — confident framing of value is what earns the yes.
The ADA's communication guidance is clear: patient confidence in the recommendation is built in the chair, by the team that explains the "why" — not by the number on the printout.
Section 4 — The Live Case-Presentation Script (10 min)
Run the presentation using the verbatim script. Have the team role-play it — one plays the hesitant patient, one the coordinator — then swap.
Verbatim Case-Acceptance Script (coordinator uses these words):
Coordinator: "Earlier you mentioned the sensitivity when you chew on the upper right — that's exactly what Dr. [Name] looked at. Let me show you."
[Put the X-ray or photo on the screen. Point to the issue.]
Coordinator: "See this? That's why it's sensitive. Left alone, it usually gets worse and more expensive. The fix is a crown — it protects the tooth and stops the pain."
[Pause. Let the patient absorb the visual.]
Coordinator: "The investment for that is [number]. Most patients handle this with a monthly payment plan — would that make it easier?"
[Patient hesitates: "Let me think about it."]
Coordinator: "Of course. Help me understand — is it the timing, the cost, or something about the treatment itself? I want to make sure we solve the right thing."
Coordinator: "Let's get you on the schedule to take care of it. I have [day] or [day] — which works?"
Homoly's research shows acceptance climbs sharply when the team presents the clinical case visually and connects it to the patient's own concern before discussing cost. Levin Group benchmarks tie a structured presentation to materially higher same-day acceptance.
Do NOT:
- Hand the patient a printout and walk away — present it, conversation first.
- Discount reflexively when the patient hesitates — diagnose the real objection first.
- Skip the schedule-today ask — an accepted plan with no appointment often never happens.
Section 5 — The Follow-Up and Reactivation Cadence (15 min)
Build the follow-up system on a whiteboard. Most undone dentistry is "soft no" treatment that nobody followed up on.
The math (for a practice presenting $40,000 in treatment per week):
- At 35% acceptance, that's $14,000 scheduled; at 55% acceptance, $22,000 — $8,000 per week of already-diagnosed dentistry
- $8,000/week × 48 weeks = a six-figure swing on treatment the dentist already recommended
- The gain costs nothing in marketing — it's communication on patients already in the chair
Common team objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"It feels pushy to follow up."* — Following up on a health recommendation is care, not pressure. Untreated decay doesn't wait.
- *"They said no, so it's done."* — "No today" usually means "not yet." The unscheduled-treatment report is a goldmine.
- *"Patients just can't afford it."* — Often they can, with financing presented as routine. You can't decide their budget for them.
Have the team pull the unscheduled-treatment report and pick five patients to call before they leave the huddle.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each team member leaves with three written commitments, posted at the front desk:
- I will lead every presentation with the patient's concern and the visual, not the price.
- I will present financing as a routine option on every plan over [threshold].
- I will follow up on every unscheduled plan within three days and at the next hygiene visit.
Close by reading Paul Homoly's principle aloud: *"Patients don't resist dentistry. They resist confusion and fear. Remove those and the yes is natural."*
Then post the case-presentation script at the treatment-coordinator station and run a live role-play with the dentist as the patient.
FAQ
Q1: Should the dentist or the coordinator present the financial part? A: The dentist presents the clinical case and "why now"; the coordinator handles the investment and financing. Separating clinical credibility from the money conversation raises acceptance.
Q2: When do I bring up cost? A: After the clinical case and the visual, never before. The patient needs to understand and want the solution before the number means anything.
Q3: A patient says "I need to check with my spouse." Real or stall? A: Often real. Offer to reserve the appointment now (cancelable) and provide the visual and a summary to share. Make saying yes later effortless.
Q4: How do I handle "my insurance won't cover it"? A: Reframe: insurance is a benefit that offsets cost, not a budget. Present the value and financing; let coverage reduce the number as a bonus, not gate the decision.
Q5: Is offering a discount ever the right move? A: Rarely as a first response — it trains patients to wait for a deal and signals the fee was inflated. Solve the real objection (fear, timing, financing) first.
Q6: How is same-day acceptance different from total acceptance? A: Same-day is scheduled before they leave; total includes treatment accepted over time via follow-up. Coach to both — and the unscheduled-treatment report drives the second.
Sources
- Paul Homoly, *Making It Easy for Patients to Say Yes*, Homoly Communications, 2003.
- American Dental Association, *Patient Communication and Treatment Presentation* guidance, ada.org.
- Levin Group, *Practice Production and Case Acceptance Benchmarks*, levingroup.com, 2023-2024.
- Roger Levin, *The Ultimate Patient Experience*, 2014.
- Dale Carnegie, *How to Win Friends and Influence People*, Simon & Schuster, 1936.
- Academy of General Dentistry, *Treatment Acceptance and Patient Trust* resources, agd.org.
- Dental Economics, *Case Acceptance and Treatment Coordinator* practice reports, 2023.
- Robert Cialdini, *Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion*, Harper Business, 2006.