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Dental Laboratory Technician

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AVG. SALARY

$49,760

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EDUCATION

High school preferred +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Decreasing

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

"We have to make decisions and tough calls every day," says dental technologist Blaine Pardy. Instructions left by dentists may be hard to follow. Sometimes they don't contain enough information, and on occasion they may appear to be completely wrong!

Each time, dental technologists must decide whether to go ahead and work according to their own standards, or try to reach often busy and hard-to-track-down dentists to clarify instructions.

You've just finished working on a bridge. You read over the prescription for the next apparatus on your list. It calls for a clasp to be made for one false tooth. You pick up the impression and hold it under the lamp light.

You look back at the request form and then at the impression. There just isn't room in this mouth full of teeth to create a clasp for the tooth the way the dentist has ordered it.

You spend another couple of minutes examining the impression, trying to find a way to insert the clasp the way the dentist has ordered. The only way to ensure a proper fit for this false tooth is to use extra soldering -- which would add $50 to the bill.

The patient will be angry if the price the dentist quoted differs from the price it costs to make the piece. That, in turn, could make the dentist angry.

This dentist is difficult to contact. Should you make some calls and try to locate him? Or, should you simply go ahead and make the tooth with the extra soldering and tell the dentist about the extra charges later? What do you do?

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

Support