| Dentists now aiming to pamper more than just your teethTuesday, October 22, 2002
                   During those dreaded moments 
                  when her dentist drills and scrapes, Nancy Rubenstein enjoys a 
                  back massage, a manicure, a cool mask for her eyes and 
                  slippers to warm her feet.
 If that isn't enough, 
                  Rubenstein can slip on virtual reality glasses and escape to 
                  Hawaii or another exotic locale. Meanwhile, the smell of 
                  chocolate-chip cookies wafts from a nearby oven.
 
 "Can I 
                  come here on vacation?" Rubenstein jokes after her dentist, 
                  Dr. Kenneth Mogell, peered into her mouth during a recent 
                  checkup.
 
 Mogell started adding the cozy touches - 
                  aromatherapy candles, warm pillows and spa services - to make 
                  dental appointments less frightening and even 
                  enjoyable.
 
 The concept is becoming more popular 
                  nationally, with dental offices making simple additions, such 
                  as massage-padded chairs, to complete transformations that 
                  make the office look like luxurious day spas.
 
 "We want 
                  to distract them so much that they don't notice the fact that 
                  I'm putting a needle in their mouths," Mogell said from his 
                  comfy office reminiscent of a home's library.
 
 The 
                  spa-like approach is designed to attract the dental-phobic: 
                  clients too anxious to go through with their dental 
                  appointments. It also helps bring in those who might seek out 
                  beauty treatments. Some offices offer Botox and collagen 
                  injections to help erase any smile lines around those new 
                  porcelain whites.
 
 The pampering, like cosmetic 
                  dentistry services, also help bring in clients who typically 
                  need less dental work than their parents did. Far fewer people 
                  are missing their teeth than 20 years ago, according to the 
                  latest U.S. Surgeon General's report.
 
 As a result, less 
                  than two-thirds of adults visited a dentist in the last year, 
                  reports the Centers for Disease Control.
 
 Even so, the 
                  money Americans spend on dental work is climbing by billions 
                  of dollars each year, with $60 billion spent two years ago, 
                  and the vast majority of dentists reporting that they do some 
                  cosmetic procedures.
 
 Dr. Gary Green, who specializes in 
                  reparative and cosmetic dentistry in his St. Louis-based 
                  practice, said he won't entirely copy the spa trend that's 
                  creeping up and down the East and West coasts.
 
 Green 
                  has patients who sit in his chair for four or five hours at a 
                  time, so it helps if they're relaxed and 
                  comfortable.
 
 But he said having a masseuse work on his 
                  patients' feet while he's working on their mouths might 
                  compromise the sterile environment. And if a masseur tickles 
                  the wrong spot, that could cause problems.
 
 "We can't 
                  afford to have the patient move. We need their undivided 
                  attention," he said.
 
 Instead, Green is considering 
                  renting space in his historic mansion-turned office to a 
                  massage therapist who can work with clients before and after 
                  appointments. He also offers small touches - stereo 
                  headphones, scented candles and warm pillows.
 
 "We're at 
                  a time now where people want instant gratification and any way 
                  we can make it easier for them is good for both of us," Green 
                  said.
 
 Some services at so-called dental spas don't cost 
                  much more than a traditional dentist and non-cosmetic 
                  procedures can be at least partially covered by 
                  insurance.
 
 Dental spas that offer more elaborate 
                  services, such as Houston's Imagemax Dental Day Spa, charge 
                  for each treatment separately. There, clients can breathe pure 
                  oxygen in a Japanese Zen garden before having a bubble-jet gum 
                  massage during their teeth cleaning. They can spend the rest 
                  of the day pampering the rest of their bodies, with seaweed 
                  body wraps, microdermabrasian facials, hot stone massages and 
                  Botox injections.
 
 Dr. Kimberly Harms, a consumer 
                  adviser for the American Dental Association, said patients, 
                  many of whom have become more accustomed to conveniences and 
                  small comforts in their daily lives, are driving the 
                  changes.
 
 Harms, who describes herself as a 
                  dental-phobic patient, said she designed her Farmington, 
                  Minn., office with a living room, library and garden with 
                  birds, flowers, trees and water.
 
 Though the services 
                  vary, most dentists say they want their offices to feel less 
                  like a doctor's office and more like home.
 
 That's why 
                  Mogell in Boca Raton doesn't mind if his patients sully their 
                  freshly cleaned smiles with a warm chocolate-chip 
                  cookie.
 
 "We just like to spoil everybody," he said.
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