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Hello from Boyett Health Services!
Greetings!
Greetings friends! It has been said that "there is always, always, always something to be thankful for". As the year is coming to a close and Thanksgiving approaches, we are able to look back over the past year and find many things that urge us to pause and give thanks to our heavenly Father. Even in the midst of conflict or trial, there are things to be grateful for.
In our busy lives, we tend to overlook the very things that make life worthwhile. We don't always take into account that we are blessed with eyes that allow us to see the beauty that surrounds us; ears that enable us to enjoy the melody of song. Many of us are also graced with family and friends, good health, a roof over our heads, food to eat, and clothes to wear. In counting our blessings, we must be sure to include those simple, yet necessary points of life.
As we give thanks, we include you among our grandest of blessings! Our patients are very important to us and we appreciate that you allow us the privelege to serve you in providing for your medical and dental needs. We, here at Boyett Health Services, are wishing you a Thanksgiving that is filled to the brim with the bountiful blessings that come from above! May God bless you and yours this holiday season!
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Cosmetic Dentistry with Oral Sedation
What is Cosmetic Dentistry? It is general dentistry with the added dimension of art. All the functional requirements of dentistry are involved, and in addition, the dentist must pay close attention to the appearance of the dental work. Doing this requires special materials. Ceramic and composite technology has advanced to the point where beautiful AND durable dental work can be provided to each patient. But there is so much extra training involved in learning how to use these highly advanced materials properly, that only those dentists who are truly passionate about the appearance of their work take the time away from the office and spend the money required. Dr. Brent Boyett and his dental team have received training from Las Vegas Institute for Advanced Dental Studies in the area of cosmetic dentistry, as well as in other facets of dentistry. It is his desire to deliver beautiful, lasting results and to give his patients a smile they can be confident about.
Cosmetic dentistry refers to a host of dental treatments designed to enhance the smile and correct chipped, cracked, discolored, and unevenly spaced teeth. From porcelain veneers to tooth-colored fillings, patients can choose from a variety of cosmetic dentistry solutions to restore the health and vitality of their smile. And for those who are fearful of dental procedures, oral or IV sedation is available to make the experience a more comfortable one (more below).
- Teeth Whitening : We offer at-home teeth bleaching (involving the use of take-home bleaching kits).
- Porcelain Veneers : ceramic shells applied to the front of the teeth to conceal cracks and chips, overlay gaps, and create a whiter appearance to a person's smile.
- Dental Bonding : the application of tooth-colored composite to the teeth. The bonding material can then be polished and shaped to look like the rest of the teeth.
- Tooth Colored Fillings : a composite resin material matched to the natural shade of your teeth. Tooth-colored "white" fillings are an attractive alternative to silver amalgam fillings and are better for your teeth.
- Porcelain Inlays and Onlays : durable and attractive restorations used to repair cracked or otherwise damaged teeth. Inlays and onlays require less tooth reduction than fillings or crowns.
- Dental Crowns : a cap used to repair badly decayed or damaged teeth. The crown is created from a mold of the original tooth, and then applied after the decay is removed and the tooth is prepared.
- Dental Bridges : a sturdy structure composed of two crowns and a prosthetic tooth. Dental bridges are used to "bridge" the gaps where teeth are missing.
Oral and IV Sedation
Sedation Dentistry offers anxiety-free dental procedures as the patient is in a deeply relaxed state, though fully responsive. It means something even more important: a comfortable experience - often with no recollection of the time passed. We often hear from patients who express their gratitude and delight in their first ever visit to the dentist without fear.
All of the amazing advances in dentistry can't do a thing for you if you don't go to the dentist. Dr. Boyett realizes that there are a lot of legitimate reasons why many people stay away from the dentist. It's been estimated that almost half of the population has some kind of dental fear, from people who feel a little uncomfortable, to those who are so terrified they can't set foot in a dental office. Whether it's fear or something else that's keeping you away, today's dentistry gives Dr. Boyett many options for making you comfortable throughout your appointment. Sedation dentistry uses medications to relax patients which makes for a totally comfortable dental experience. You may choose Nitrous Oxide, Oral or IV sedation. Nitrous Oxide is a very light form of sedation, which works fast and wears off quicklyand works extremely well to reduce the anxieties in many dental patients. Sandra Boyett is our Registered Nurse Anesthetist, available for IV sedation. She administers concious sedation to patients at Boyett Health Services for oral surgery and for anxiety control during routine dental procedures. There is always a doctor and an anesthetist present for all concious sedations at our clinic, so that you may feel confident that you are in capable hands at all times.
Financing Options
Dental work often requires materials and skill that can cost more than visits to a regular physician. Even with insurance, you may find a treatment plan to be outside of your budget. No worries! We offer financing through three credible companies that can help you to get the dental treatment you want and deserve. You may visit any of the following websites to apply for financial assistance:
It's often best if you are able to apply for financing prior to your dental visit, but if you do not have a computer, we would be happy to help you here in our office. You may contact our office to schedule an appointment, or simply to ask questions about our services. Either way, we look forward to hearing from you!
Boyett Health Services
Dental Office
(205) 921-0893 |
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Dental Coverage and You
Did you know that each year insurance companies make millions of dollars off patients who forego necessary and preventive dental care? Many individuals who are paying for dental insurance do not realize that their plans provide coverage up to a certain dollar amount annually. Consequently, some patients are not scheduling the dental treatment they need, deserve, and have insurance to cover. Thus, the insurance revenues allocated to pay dental claims on many patients are never used, and, unfortunately, those dollars cannot be carried over year-to-year. The bottom line: what the patient does not use they lose. Clearly, it pays in many ways to schedule the preventive care or other dental treatment that you need. We are here to help you secure the insurance coverage available to you on every dental procedure you schedule.
Understanding Insurance
The first thing to understand about dental insurance is that it isn't insurance at all. Insurance originated as, and is by definition, a pooling of funds to pay for a rare but catastrophic event. Fire insurance is an exellent example. Originally, medical insurance was also designed this way. Payment for routine office visits, basic medications, and low deductibles are a relatively recent modification in medical policies to create additional employee benefits that are not true insurance but "tax free" benefits.
Restrictions and Limitations
Unlike events like cancer or your house burning down, dental disease is neither rare nor catastrophic. Therefore, dental insurance isn't insurance at all but really a method for employees to receive "tax free benefits". Rather than insurance, it is more accurate to refer to them as dental benefit plans. When originally introduced in the 1970's, these plans were very simply designed and employees could go to any dentist. To keep premiums reasonable, total benefits in any one year were limited to $1000.00. Thirty years later, most benefit plans still have this same maximum limit. Premiums, of course, have gone up because the costs for administering these plans (employee wages, cost of living, etc.) have increased. To help attempt to keep premium costs down for employers and to continue to serve shareholders with profits, healthcare companies have significantly modified the original plan structures. This is the reason there are a variety of plans available such as dental capitation plans, dental HMO's, dental preferred provider organizations (PPO's), dental referral organizations (DFO's), etc. It is just as hard for dental offices to understand the details of all these different plans as it is for the patients! The bottom line however in all these alphabet soup plans, is RESTRICTONS and LIMITATIONS. The most common restriction is whom you are encouraged to choose for your dentist. Actually, it's against the law in most states to restrict you from seeing any healthcare provider you want but, should you go out of the "network", your benefit may be reduced by 10-30 percent. In all of the restrictive plans, there is not only a contract between your employer and the insurance company; the plan dentist has signed a contract as well. The benefit for the dentist is that his/her name appears on a list and you are encouraged to choose this practitioner. What the dentist has to agree to in order to gain this "preferred provider status" varies from contract to contract.
Limitations can take many forms. The most common is to exclude certain services altogether, usually the better treatments or the newer, superior services now available because of advancements in science and technology. Another limitation is the "LEAT" clause, which stands for Least Expensive Alternative Treatment. Essentially, this clause allows the insurance to choose to pay for a lesser benefit for the cheapest material or treatment that they consider is adequate for you. This is a very broad power and it is a clerical person sitting at a computer that usually makes this determination. Even when referred to a dental consultant, the judgement is still made by a company employee who has not even seen the condition being treated.
What all this means is that the changes in dental benifit plans over the last decade have changed the benefits to you, the employee. Whereas benefits were once determined based on need, they are no longer based on need, but on specific contract terms negotiated between an employer and a healthcare insurance company. In plans that direct you to specific dentists, there is also a contract containing specific agreements between the insurance company and the dentist.
Summary
The common theme today when dental benefit plans deny or reduce benefits is to imply that the care is not needed or that the fee charged was too high. We feel you are the best judge of your need, not a clerical person at an insurance company. Our response to the insurance company is that their benefits are too low. Once again you are the best judge whether our fees match our quality. Whatever dental coverage you may have, we are here to help you get the most out of your plan. If you think you may have dental benefits remaining for 2010, contact our office at (205) 921-0893 and we'll gladly assist you in getting the dental care you want and deserve. Remember, what you don't use, you lose! |
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WEEKEND ACCESS TO HEALTHCARE
Suppose it's Saturday morning and your child has been up all night with an ear ache and fever. Now you are both exhausted and you have to do something. Your options include going to the ER and being stuck with a huge bill or waiting for you doctor's office to open on Monday. Not to worry! Here at Boyett Health Services, we have a weekend clinic with appointments available on Saturday from 9am to 5pm, and on Sunday noon to 5 pm.
Dr.Brent Boyett explains, "the effort is designed to extend access to care for two groups of people. The first is the patient who works, travels or goes to school during the week and can't afford to take time off to go to the doctor for routine care. The second is the patient who develops and acute problem over the weekend that won't wait until Monday". Should you fit either of these descriptions, we would love to be of assistance in meeting your healthcare needs. Please contact us for an appointment at 921-5556.
www.boyetthealth.com
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HOLIDAY HOURS:
Our office will be closed...
November 25 and 26
for Thanksgiving
(But our weekend clinic will
remain open the 27th and 28th).
December 24-26
for Christmas
January 1
for New Year's Day
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National Diabetes Month

Lower your risk for developing diabetes
Type 2 diabetes is one of the most common preventable diseases in the United States. You can lower the risk for yourself and your family by making healthy food choices and maintaining a healthy weight.
November is National Diabetes Awareness Month. Set some time aside to assess the risk to you and your family of developing this life-altering, and often life-ending, disease. If you see the need for change, now is a perfect time to start.
The American Diabetes Association offers the following tips for building a healthier plate. Utilizing these suggestions will help you feel better and reduce your risk for developing type 2 diabetes:
· Use a grocery list when shopping for food to help you choose more fresh vegetables, fruits and whole grains.
· Instead of stressing out about the foods you're trying not to eat, focus on the foods you need to eat more. Go to MyPyramid.gov , find out how many servings of veggies, fruits and whole grains you need each day, and work on achieving those goals. You'll be so busy (and so full) "focusing on the positive" that you won't even miss that hot fudge sundae.
· Buy leaner meats (such as chicken, turkey and lean cuts of pork or beef such as sirloin or chuck roast) and lower fat dairy products (like low-fat or skim milk and yogurt). · Buy whole grain breads and cereals. · Save money by buying less soda, sweets and chips or other snack foods.
· Remember special "dietetic" or "diabetic" foods often cost extra money and may not be much healthier than simply following the suggestions given here.Nearly 24 million children and adults in the U.S. have diabetes. Diabetes contributes to the deaths of more than 230,000 Americans each year. The American Diabetes Association estimates the total cost of diagnosed diabetes in the U.S. is more than $174 billion. Further published studies suggest when additional costs for gestational diabetes, pre-diabetes and undiagnosed diabetes are included, the total diabetes-related costs in the U.S. could exceed $218 billion.For more information about how you can join the American Diabetes Association's movement to Stop Diabetes during American Diabetes Month, visit stopdiabetes.com or call 1-800-DIABETES (1-800-342-2383).
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Don't forget to drop in to our office for your Seasonal Flu Shot!
- No appointment necessary!
- No copay required!
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Cookie Recipe
Magic Peanut Butter
Middles

- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 cup white sugar
- 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
- 1/2 cup butter, softened
- 1/4 cup peanut butter
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 egg
- 3/4 cup confectioners' sugar
- 3/4 cup peanut butter
1. In small bowl blend flour, cocoa and baking soda. Mix until well blended.
2. In large bowl beat sugar, butter or margarine and 1/4 cup peanut butter, until light and fluffy. Add vanilla and egg, beat. Stir in flour mixture until blended. Set aside.
3. To make Filling: Combine confectioner's sugar and 3/4 cup peanut butter. Blend well.
4. Roll filling into 30 - 1 inch balls. For each cookie, with floured hands, shape about 1 Tablespoon of dough around 1 peanut butter ball, covering completely. Place 2 inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet. Flatten with glass dipped in sugar.
5. Bake at 375 degrees F (190 degrees C) for 7-9 minutes. When cookies are done, they should be set and slightly cracked.
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Boyett Health Services 205-921-5556 |
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PSALM 107:1, 8-9
1 Oh, give thanks to the LORD, for He is good! For His mercy endures forever. 8 Oh, that men would give thanks to the LORD for His goodness, And for His wonderful works to the children of men! 9 For He satisfies the longing soul, And fills the hungry soul with goodness.
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