Problems of malocclusion for two out of three Italians
Almost two out of three Italian adults affirm to have dental malocclusion or misalignment problems. The demand for clear aligners in dental clinics is already booming.
This is demonstrated by an extensive market study carried out by Key-Stone Research Institute, which integrated data both from industry and dental practices.
Key-Stone analyzed the phenomenon thanks to an extensive survey, carried out on a representative sample of 2,878 Italians, aged between 20 and 50 years, representing more than half of the national population.
The study shows that 55% declare problems of malocclusion, already corrected in adulthood with orthodontic braces in 19% of cases. For that matter, this is a share also confirmed by plenty of international literature.
Malocclusion: the Italians’ perception
The Italians’ perception about this problem is very interesting, as well as the great desire to solve it. These aspects were investigated on over 1,000 individuals, that is 36% of the sample who reported a malocclusion yet untreated (at least 8 million people in the age group investigated).
Among them:
60% complain of dental misalignment, considering it to be minor
34% consider the problem as moderately severe
6% consider the misalignment as very evident
The age group between 25 and 35 years is the most sensitive to the issue, judging the imperfection generally to be more evident.
Impact on the aesthetic and functional levels
Malocclusion mainly concerns aesthetics and, according to the interviewees, it worsens their appearance in 90% of cases, albeit with different levels of perceived severity.
Anyway, the problems mentioned by the sample are not only aesthetic. The survey provided for the possibility of reporting different symptoms (multiple choice):
in 28% of cases, difficulties in chewing were mentioned
in 28% of cases, gum problems emerge
difficult oral hygiene, as disclosed by about one third of the sample
orthopedic and postural issues, albeit to a lesser extent
only 20% do not report any functional problems related to malocclusion
The propensity to solve the problem
Although with different degrees of motivation, 72% of the sample affirmed to be interested in correcting their malocclusion or misalignment. In particular, half of them (36% of total respondents) show a high motivation. Translating this into numbers, it deals with over 3 million Italians, mostly women – twice as many as men – with a significant greater interest as the evidence of the defect increases. The strong propensity to correct their smile exceeds 50% for those who complain of a very evident misalignment and, more generally, it is over 40% among those who have both aesthetic and functional problems.
Restoring a perfect smile with the aligners
Among those wishing to correct their smile, 62% would prefer to use a transparent aligner system. For another 30%, the type of device does not matter, but it would be very important to them to solve the problem of dental misalignment. It is above all those who present more serious dental conditions who want to solve the problem, regardless of the type of medical device the orthodontist will suggest.
Limits and forecasts
Slightly more than 70% of the interviewees have already considered the possibility to consult a dentist to solve the problem, but the economic barrier is the most named brake in accepting orthodontic treatments in the short term, particularly during this time of uncertainty due to the pandemic. Nowadays, part of the population is, in fact, more cautious when taking into consideration expenses likely impacting on the family budget.
In any case, 6% have already decided to go to the dental office to solve the problem and, if the doctor evaluates positively the need to carry out the alignment orthodontic treatment, it can be estimated that almost half a million people could undergo corrective treatments soon.
Over 150,000 treatments with aligners in 2021
According to Key-Stone researchers, this figure is consistent with the measurements carried out by the research institute itself, specialized in the dental sector at international level. In fact, data coming from industry and dental practices indicate that in 2019 over 80,000 treatments with aligners were carried out (in the vast majority of cases on adults). In 2021, over 150,000 treatments will be carried out, which is twice the previous figure, after having experienced an evident slowdown in growth in 2020, due to the pandemic.
According to Key-Stone’s estimates, this is an investment for Italians which will exceed 300 million Euros by 2021 and will continue its double-digit growth in the next few years.
Patients treated with aligners
Motivation for treatment
Within the starting sample, 200 cases involving subjects who recently underwent orthodontic treatment with transparent aligners were also studied. The goal is to evaluate the reasons leading them to the treatment and the overall perceived experience.
Considering the 200 patients treated, it emerged that the psychological component is absolutely dominant in the motivation for treatment:
44% in fact stated that they wanted to solve the discomfort first of all with themselves
35% claimed that they wanted to improve the relationship with others, showing a social discomfort as well.
Satisfaction
In general, the experience and perception of the treatment outcome are very positive, with 34% of treated patients affirming to have achieved a better result than expected and, undoubtedly, beyond the initial expectations. The main factors causing satisfaction are:
first of all, the competence and interpersonal skills of the clinician and of the clinic staff in general
the final result, on average very satisfactory
comfort and transparency as distinctive elements of the treatment.
Overall, over 85% would re-undergo the treatment and recommend it to friends and family. This means that, in addition to the strong interest of a part of the population in solving their misalignment, the positive experience of friends and relatives generates a driving force in the sector, fostering positive references and organically stimulating the demand.
Since their debut on the market – in the late 1990s and early 2000s – it was evident that invisible aligners would revolutionize the world of orthodontics or at least make significant changes in the way we mean it.
First of all, this is due to the fact that in the aligners market the weight of services is greater than the weight of products, which is the opposite of what happens in traditional orthodontics.
Aligners vs traditional orthodontics
The graph below shows the progressive increase in the weight of aligners over the years, compared to traditional orthodontics (brackets, bands, wires, etc): in 2011 it was 27%, while in 2019 it exceeded 60%.
Furthermore, although the market is still dominated today by a large player – deserving the credit for having introduced the “Invisalign system” all over the world and for having built a previously nonexistent market -, other players from the orthodontic domain joining the market could change some dynamics.
Some of these companies, in fact, have a strong know-how in both digital and orthodontics. The business will therefore tend to shift the focus from the appliance to the planning system. The clinician will work with an increasingly integrated single digital system, which will let him approach orthodontic treatments (either with aligners, traditional solutions or hybrid ones) according to the complexity of the case and his/her level of competence (orthodontist or GP).
The offer of aligners: a “liquid market”
The offer varies widely: from the multinational corporation already operating in the dental sector and specialized in orthodontics (range extension), to the company focused on other specializations such as implantology (range diversification); from the local manufacturer with centralized production to the dental laboratory (sometimes organized in the form of a network), equipped with all the technologies necessary for the production of aligners.
We are therefore facing a “liquid market“: the boundaries between organizations and along the supply chain are becoming blurred. It is a business in which manufacturers and laboratories with different levels of production centralization operate and compete. On the one hand, there are companies featuring a centralized and industrialized production system where the structure of the processes is controlled, repeatable and organized process design. On the other hand, there are more local companies or those characterized by peripheral organizational and process dynamics.
Penetration of the aligners technique
A first survey carried out by Key-Stone in October 2020 on a sample of 400 generalist dental practices to evaluate the penetration of the technique and the main brands revealed a 79% of respondents who claim to suggest – even occasionally –aligners to their patients, even if only occasionally. Please consider that this percentage was 61% in 2018, according to a previous study in the same topic.
Production channels
A more in-depth analysis of the most used brands shows how the laboratories supply channel covers 28% of the dental practices procurements (although only 10% exclusively). Through the analysis of the brands mentioned by those clinicians supplied by laboratories, it emerges that most of them refer to in-house handcrafted productions.
The aligners market in Italy in 2020
It is estimated that more than 80,000 caseswere performed in Italy in 2020, excluding purely handcrafted processes, which were not taken into consideration in the research conducted by Key-Stone at the end of 2020 on the aligners market in Italy. The market value is estimated at just under 85 million Euros (at sell-out level, at value to the dentist and VAT excl.), leaving out purely handcrafted manufacturing.
The growing trend in Italy
The most relevant growth was recorded in 2019, thanks to both Invisalign’s entry into the world of GPs and the commercial development of some companies relying on a very extensive sales network.
Positioning drivers
In fact, aligners deserve credit for making orthodontics “accessible” also to general dentists. Accurately supported by an excellent tutoring service, increasingly advanced and intuitive softwares, training courses and marketing activities made available by companies, dentists have decided to expand the range of treatments offered to their patients.
In the research conducted by Key-Stone at the end of 2020, the main positioning drivers emphasized by companies in their value proposition were analyzed as well. From this study it emerged that, in addition to the transparency and comfort of the aligners (now essential conditions), the positioning drivers are:
duration of treatment: if too long, the patient’s compliance decreases, as well as the revenue of the dental practice. If we consider the concept of time as applied to logistics, the companies are striving to reduce the time involved in planning treatments, manufacturing and shipping aligners to customers.
the service offered in different areas. Companies have invested enormously in assisting dentists in the design and set-up phases, but also in training (classes, webinars, presentations, certifications, etc.) and consulting, making available to the dentists teams of clinicians and / or specialized technicians throughout the treatment period.
the treatment planning and management software and the data sharing platforms can be owned by the company and therefore developed and implemented internally or multi-client, then purchased from external providers (3Shape, Age Solution etc.) and sometimes adapted to specific needs.
technological innovation represents a real differentiation driver. Companies of the sector with an industrial approach generally have a processes organization which is a great competitive advantage per se. Moreover, technologies available to manufacturers, due to the large investments required, are generally not found in laboratories or small companies: the gap on production quality is therefore widening.
Some future trends
A phenomenon that we are witnessing and that Key-Stone will try to monitor in the future is the “direct to consumer” business model, which involves physical stores or solutions that are directly delivered to the patient’s home, thus bypassing the dental office. In the USA, their diffusion has been successful, while in Europe the legislation on devices is more stringent, so the business model designed is different.
There is no doubt that artificial intelligence applied to orthodontic planning tools and the implementation of the digital workflow with the use of suitable technologies fosters these phenomena, making it nowadays possible to perform:
3D diagnosis
virtual rendering of the treatment progress and outcome
design and production of the appliances
supervision – even remotely – during therapy
analysis and re-processing of the results for continuous improvement as well as for statistical purposes.
More and more often we talk about the role of the office manager also in the dental field. But what kind of professional are we talking about? And in which context does the need to train and include in the dental practice a professional figure with such a unique background for the Italian dental business emerge?
The shift in dentistry
Even before the reorganization caused by the pandemic, dentistry presented a scenario characterized by strong dynamics of change. It deals with an evolving market, where offer must keep up with the frequent reorganization of demand and the creation of new standards.
Dynamics of the dental offer: hypercompetition
The competition is increasingly intense and characterized by two elements:
the participation of competitors with a more marketing-oriented approach and organized to pursue profit and scalability goals.
foreign investors and funds joining the market.
Different patients and crisis of demand
The demand is also not immune to change and reveals a new patient profile:
increasingly solicited by marketing and communication activities
informed
demanding
attentive to the quality of dental services
more difficult to attract and, therefore, to build their customer loyalty.
The dental office’s ability to react: planning and differentiating
From a strategic point of view, the dental practice wishing to react to the changes in market should apply a structured planning and control system: planning and differentiating are the key concepts of the growth process.
It is essential to know that planning does not mean having your own point of view on what will happen and, based on these hypotheses, making strategic decisions related to your business. Predicting is not enough! It is necessary to go further and, once the possible scenarios have been hypothesized, to choose a certain future to pursue and achieve. It is a path that must be built over the medium and long term, through the organization of resources and activities, according to the objectives to be achieved.
The dental offer as a “consumer experience”
In this climate of transformation and adaptation there are now many dentists who feel a certain discomfort, which we could consider as to be of attitudinal type. If the patient evaluates and chooses the practice by looking online or “coming across” the dental office by chance, or after having detected it through a sign or advertising, and not only through traditional word of mouth, the relationship that is being developed with it will be similar to the one with a company (albeit providing health services). In these cases, the dental offer is unfortunately felt according to a “consumer experience” model, typical of a purchase occurring in other sectors and the relationship of trust between patient and professional loses slightly its importance (in the selection phase) in favor of classic brand selection patterns.
Today many dentists therefore find themselves facing this new challenge because the competitiveness of the offer is also based on the patients’ perception (perceived quality), beyond the quality of care received (objective quality), with a greater weight given to interpersonal relationship, extra clinical services, etc.
The value proposition of the dental office
To ensure the social recognition of the practice, it is therefore necessary to define an effective and differentiating value proposition.
The value proposition:
is a promise of unique benefits (different from the competitors’ ones)
is related to the entire organization
can be addressed to the whole target audience or to groups of customers (segments) with similar needs for specific services.
It is a fundamental pillar in the business strategy because it answers the question: “Why should clients / patients choose our practice and its range of services?”.
How to define the value proposition of the dental practice
The steps necessary to define it are as follows:
Identify the primary target audienceof the clinic, or the groups of customers (segments) in the case of a specific services range. These target groups are generally characterized by similar clinical needs, but they also look for services in more general terms, positioning, style of perfornance of the treatment, etc. For differentiation purposes, it is essential to define what recipient the offer is addressed to.
In order to define a recognizable offer, it is necessary to know thecompetitors, their offer and the customers they address to, in order to evaluate how competitive the offer is.
After having analyzed target groups and competitors, the overall offer of the clinic (type and range of services, system of services, pricing policies, performing methods) should be developed with the aim of providing benefits that are an appreciable solution with respect to needs and potential wishes of the target audience and as an alternative to the competitors’ offer.
Finally,the value proposition must be formulated clearly, coherently, effectively then, the patients should be made aware of it. Patients must perceive the actual value proposed to them, identifying themselves with the recipient of the offer and recognizing its benefits. The effectiveness of the communication is, in fact, strictly correlated to its consistency with the value proposition and with the selected target.
The foundations for a solid and lasting future
Formulating the dental practice’s proposal in these terms is useful to:
obtain a competitive advantage,crucial for success and prosperity over time
gain useful data for the development of operational plans.
Within this context, strategic decisions and entrepreneurial activities range from the coordination of human resources and delegation processes, to the definition of the budget and constant monitoring of the performance, passing through the effective management of patients, collaborators and of the office in general, thanks to the most modern techniques.
Strategic analysis is necessary and based on adequate KPIs (Key Performance Indicators), with the aim of assessing strengths and weaknesses and considering environmental opportunities and threats. To lay the foundations for a solid and lasting future, after the strategic analysis, it is useful to implement an action plan.
The importance of business management, besides clinical quality
From the point of view of growth, the traditional practice should go from being only a place where the dentist provides high-level specialist healtcare, to be an organization where it is acknowledged the importance of the extra-clinical aspects of management, marketing and budget control of the clinic and of the resources.
Of course, except for cases where dentists are particularly interested and work almost “full time” on the subject, it is practically impossible for the dentist to personally handle all these aspects in a constant and structured manner, especially considering the increasingly high standards required by patients and by the organizational system (planning and control), which, as anticipated, are more and more often achieved thanks to two fundamental drivers: clinical quality and business management.
The dental office manager: a unique and complete profile within the dental context
And so here are the dynamics and the scenario in which the need to delegate pure management activities to a specific professional, the so-called “Dental Office Manager”, has developed.
In fact, this managerial figure represents the operative maker of the strategic decisions in the hands of the dentist-entrepreneur, to whom he reports regularly and with whom he collaborates directly. He is responsible for coordinating the daily operations of the dental practice, focusing on the patients’ needs and company objectives, with the aim of making the business more profitable.
The profession of the dental office manager: duties
The dental office manager is an extra-clinical managerial figure specialized in the dental sector and covering different roles, including:
business development in general
specific marketing activities for customer retention and acquisition of new patients
strategic planning of the agenda
organization of human resources
planning and control of the dental office as a whole
cost and performance analysis of individual professionals
management of budget forecast and results.
Training and knowledge of the dental office manager
Generally, the dental office manager attended business schools, but it is not mandatory. The background of this figure must include:
a specific training, obtained by attending the numerous courses available, which must however be multidisciplinary (project planning, marketing, analytical accounting, management and HR organization, etc.)
a continuous professionalupdating
an in-depth knowledge of the main Office application packages, in particular Excel for all “off-system” processing activity.
This concept of out-of-the-system implies some essential aspects that should be present in every dental practice:
the use and familiarity with the management software
the quality and completeness of the data entered by the whole team
the presence of the data extraction function in the software used: nowadays it is not possible to have a software limited by pre-set statistics, without the possibility of conveniently extracting all the information, in order to re-elaborate it in a personalized way by the user’s analytical intelligence.
The organizational and economic patterns for the post-Covid-19 dental practice radically change.
For years we have held to be true, rightly I believe, that through the “saturation of the chair time” that is, by using the available production time as much as possible, we would have reached the maximum profitability, within the boundaries set by the business model of the dental practice.
So, if we had managed to get each dental unit to work up to about 85% of the time available (while still leaving space for the management of the peaks), we could have achieved the optimization of the management.
Eventually looking for further improvement in other areas (costs, prices, mix of services, etc.), but no longer in the already achieved ability to make the most out of the structure. Few succeeded, for some it was a kind of mirage. Never as now, the use of the past is more appropriate, a past that will soon be a distant past.
The change of the organizational model
A small, microscopic, biological parasite has changed our lives, all over the world, we will see for how long but in the meantime, to return with our feet on the ground, it has already changed the organizational model of dental offices, and many other environments where waiting times and gatherings were the habit.
In the specific case of the dental practice, the issues of waiting and crowding in the waiting room, the punctuality of operators and patients, the efficient organization of appointments, had long been on the agenda of things to improve, and for someone the improvement project was already well advanced.
Clearly, we are talking about dental practices in full activity, not those (about 30%) in the decline phase and with a demand that is progressively decreasing, often in parallel with the progressive increase in the age of the owner, who accompanies himself and his study towards a logical and biological quiescence.
But the central theme of this radical change is the organization of the working model. It is not only in the specific topic of the patient gatherings, easily resolved with an improvement in the management of the agenda, but the great problem also lies above all in the change of clinical and extra-clinical protocols, which will forcefully reduce the objective production capacity of the dental practice.
The Italian situation
All this already seems very clear in the mind of Italian dentists, who, interviewed in the last week of March (in collaboration with IDI Evolution for the activity of the collection of the questionnaires), as part of Key-Stone research, declare in 41% of the cases that the most likely possibility (the question was a single choice to indicate the most relevant aspect) is that they will have to transform clinical protocols and, in 35% of the cases, to improve the management of the appointments.
Only 15% focused on the increase in costs for the greater use of PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) and 9% of dentists (which doubles for those over 55) think that in the end it will not change much compared to their previous daily practice.
Although the data collection method (online only) could contain some possible systematic error, the sample size, made up of 1,028 dentists, encouraged us to publish the survey, which is believed to be reliable.
Clearly, these are points of view, moreover at a particular time, knowing perfectly well that mood and awareness change day by day during this interminable lockdown phase. Until official protection guidelines for operators and patients are published, objective conclusions cannot be drawn. Only then, it will be possible to make real and reliable calculations of times and costs of this sort of Copernican revolution of dentistry.
Personally, I believe that the real big problem of the coming months, or maybe years, will not be so much that of the demand for treatments, or rather the economic power of the families, instead, the objective capacity of the dental practices is the focus, because there is no doubt that, for the same working hours, fewer patients can be accommodated.
The concept of “dilution”
And here comes the concept of “dilution”.
It will not be so much from the ability to saturate the practice that efficiency and profit can be achieved: this would only produce chaos, conflict and health insecurity.
The key factor of success will be the possibility and ability to dilute in an optimized way the practice activity.
Everyone will find their own solutions:
longer appointments to perform more treatments at once
the extension of opening hours
the use of digital technologies also to reduce delays and risks in the supply chain
teledentistry for the development of some remote services
serious and rigorous engineering of the workflows
the elimination of some operatory units to increase the waiting spaces
the reduction of the staff if the unsustainability of the fixed costs, compared to the demand that can be granted, is ascertained.
The competitive scenario
The competitive scenario may also change, with the possible closure of a significant part of dental practices (already stated in the same survey by 14% of the sample) and the likely unsustainability of some low-cost models.
But all this will, paradoxically, only exacerbate the problem of a possible excess of demand compared to the capacity and, incredibly, the real criticality could be the production capacity in a business model that must in any case generate a correct profitability.
The choice, on the other hand, to reduce the priority on prevention, hygiene, check-up visits, by someone ventilated since they would produce a reduced unit value, would be a misfortune for the entire system, for the organic expansion of the patient base and for the dental health of citizens.
We can only trust in the balance of the guidelines defined by the competent authorities, which take into account the health of operators and patients, but also the difference in risk of the different treatments and the indispensable economic sustainability of the dental practice.
Then, it will be the vision, intelligence, and entrepreneurial ability of those who will have to reorganize their profession to make the difference, and it is not said that the competitive advantages achieved in the past are a sure factor of success for the future.
The article has been published on Dental Tribune in Italian, English and French.
We are all asking ourselves “when” we will return to normal life after this pandemic, but although this is the most pressing issue, the most disturbing question is probably “how” this hypothetical normality will be.
The pandemic impact
Perhaps also for this reason, all over the world we speak more and more often of “new normal”, namely that phase, which will probably last for years, characterized by at least three influencing variables coming into play:
the management of the endemic phase of the virus
the new logics of socialization
the great economic crisis ahead of us.
These three points certainly don’t need much comment. As regards the management of the endemic phase, it is rather obvious that the timing for achieving herd immunity, the real effectiveness of vaccines also against any other variants, the modalities and programming for periodic boosters are all factors affecting both behavior and social organization. In the workplace, remote work will in any case be more frequently exploited and business travel limited (a return to the level of air traffic recorded in 2019 is expected not before 2025). Certain economic sectors will suffer the impact of the pandemic for a long time, for example those most affected by remote work, which will become regular practice even for just a few days a week (with an impact on services related to commuting, food services, etc.), or the retail trade, if we consider the enormous impact of the development of e-commerce and its inexorable acquisition of market shares. At the same time, some areas will also considerably grow, such as IT, pharmaceuticals, delivery services, etc. There will also be sectors strongly supported by the European Recovery Fund, but these too will only allow the development of specific sectors, according to each national Government’s plan, whose fundamentals are based on ecological transition, digital transformation, employment and smart, sustainable and inclusive growth, measures looking to the next generation, including education and skills development, etc.
As anticipated, not all sectors will have the same support. The dramatic collapse of gross product, production, and export, as well as the significant rise in public debt, will take years to return to 2019 levels. Unfortunately, the only aspect we are sure about is the uncertainty regarding these factors.
Despite everything, as we will see here following, the dental sector can be considered as central and essential to the health of the population.
Let’s see then throughout this article some thoughts on the impact of the pandemic in Italy and on the probable recovery dynamics occurring in the dental sector.
My job, as head of the Key-Stone research institute, is to collect, process and analyze data, but I am often also asked to produce forecasts and strategic guidelines. Well, over this year my writings, interventions and seminars have been numerous, however, I have always explained the serious lack we have faced, that is the uncertainty due to the total absence of past data. This aspect makes it impossible to work on mathematical models, moreover, there are just few similarities with past pandemics, since in the last serious ones the social and healthcare context was totally different.
Nonetheless, in this catastrophic year, Governments, international organizations, the biggest world strategic consultants, all research institutes (including Key-Stone), companies and associations, have begun to collect and catalog qualitative information and quantitative data, developing economic forecasts and theories on the post-Covid-19 recovery.
Also in relation to the Italian dental sector, we can count on numerous researches and studies carried out this year, and thanks to this contribution I would like to share some food for thought, by explaining what we believe the steps to recovery will be, in terms of demand for dental services.
As I have already had the opportunity to write, the current crisis arises from an interruption in interconnections. During the three-month lockdown, we were prevented from moving, from consuming, although there would have been financial possibilities, in theory. But even later, until today, if we give up buying and consuming certain products or services, it is often not because of a shortage of money, but rather because of an objective unfeasibility connected to social distancing policies. In addition to that, we must take job uncertainty into account, another dominant word in recent months; an uncertainty that now affects many millions of Italian families, especially considering those who work in sectors heavily affected by the pandemic (travel, tourism, food service, non-food retail trade, etc.).
But what happens in consumption, when we are faced with a phase of uncertainty or, worse, of real or imminent worsening of the family economic situation? First, all those spending decisions that are deemed unnecessary or simply not indispensable are postponed. Unfortunately, among these, we also find the expenses for dental services.
Analysis of the short-term impact on dental treatments
In November 2020, Key-Stone interviewed 1,200 Italian families and it emerged that one in four Italians, aged between 20 and 74, would have renounced the dentist, except for urgent needs, until the end of 2021. These are 13 million Italians, whose uncertainties due to the pandemic are now added to their traditional economic and cultural problems. The percentage rises to about 40% for those who have had or think they have precarious employment and economic situation because of the pandemic. However, considering that a part of the population would have renounced the dentist anyway (most of them because of structural economic reasons not attributable to Covid-19), 61% of these undoubtedly attribute this choice directly to the pandemic, because of the consequent worsening of their economic situation or for fear of being infected. On the other hand, a positive note comes from the segment of children and adolescents: according to Key-Stone’s research, the intention to give up on treatments is reduced in the case of children aged between 6 and 19, whether it deals with more expensive treatments -such as orthodontic ones- or checkups and routine treatments. In conclusion, the real effect of the pandemic would cause a reduction in the demand for dental services estimated around -13%, at least one billion less in dental expenditure and therefore in lost revenues for the sector.
Possible future needs
In this context, Key-Stone explored the topic in depth, trying to understand which areas of need are most felt by the population and which is the expected procrastination time for treatments.
First of all, it is worth remembering that the citizens interviewed do not always have the clinical skills to be able to judge their own needs in terms of dental services, moreover the climate of trust can change suddenly depending on the overall pandemic situation and on personal experience.
The research conducted confirmed how a certain fear for infection, but above all economic and employment uncertainty has pushed part of the population to postpone non-urgent dental care. This situation is also quite usual in times of famine, crises when confidence in the future decreases. In fact, it is normal for people to prefer to solve basic needs (in our case pain or urgent functional problems), neglecting other expenses that may be postponed.
By re-processing the data coming from the research, we have extrapolated the percentage of adult population claiming to be likely in need of certain dental therapies and treatments, even if not in the immediate future.
In Figure 1 we can see a ranking of the main treatments, first of all, fillings then oral hygiene, concerning almost half of the interviewees, immediately followed by extractions, implants (with consequent prostheses), and traditional orthodontics. There are fewer esthetic needs, such as veneers, or treatments with aligners.
Intention to postpone dental treatments
To the same people who stated possible future needs, we asked if they thought to be treated soon or if they would have preferred to postpone dental care as later as possible, or even to give it up. In Figure 2, we can see how the intention to postpone dental treatments is higher for those rated as more expensive. It is slightly surprising that some treatments more related to esthetic needs have a rather high procrastination rate even though patients who manifest these needs have medium-high levels of education and income.
Map of the potential needs and the intervention priority
By matching the results of the potential needs with the intervention priority (i.e. the reverse of the intention to postpone), it is possible to have a clearer representation (Figure 3) of the therapeutic areas that could be most affected in the short term, a period that we could probably frame up to the end of 2021.
The areas of implants and prostheses will probably have greater difficulties in recovering in the short term, while others -more related to restoration– could move faster towards a normal condition. The situation of orthodontics is peculiar, since for adults it may present a certain slow recovery, while as regards therapies for children (not shown in this chart), a much smaller crisis is expected, as explained here following.
However, the scenario just outlined depends on the type of the dental practice patients, considering their average socio-economic level, the working sector of their families and the geographical areas where they live, in the event that the local economy is particularly affected by the effects of the confinement measures.
The dental treatments are essential
At the same time, this research reveals some very important information, already widely emphasized in the media, namely that 30% of those who during the phase of total confinement (March-May 2020) had problems with their teeth or mouth without having been able or willing to go to the dentist, reported a worsening in their oral situation. The numbers coming from the research carried out by Key-Stone for SIdP at the end of the lockdown period speak for themselves: over 10 million Italians had problems with their teeth and gums during the ten-week confinement and about 3 million state that the situation has worsened because of the impossibility to go to the dentist. It is therefore unquestionable that dental treatments must be considered essential.
We are therefore dealing with a sector, and indeed also a market, where the fundamentals are solid, where long-term structural crises cannot be foreseen, but which can contract or expand based on economic and social external phenomena, which lead to the postponement of certain treatments in particular periods.
Medium-long term recovery dynamics
According to the main theories on post-pandemic recovery, we must consider that after a first phase of giving up certain goods, especially services (which are generally postponed in the process of hierarchizing personal and family expenses) by part of the population, there will be a physiological long-term settlement (probably for at least a year) during which the population, gradually emerging from economic hardship or uncertainty, will resume even the most expensive treatments. In the meantime, it should not be forgotten that, unfortunately, some of those who have delayed oral care for too long will have a more compromised oral situation. Following this recovery, however, the demand for services should settle at slightly lower levels, following the trend that was already taking place in the three-year period 2017-2019. In this analysis, the observation of what happened during the great recession 2008-2013, with an exceptional recovery in dental care in the following two-year period 2014-2015 and the subsequent slowdown in growth up to the stagnant or slightly declining situation reported by ISTAT in 2018 and 2019, helps us a lot. As far as dental care is concerned, even the first phase of lockdown resulted in a strong recovery in summer 2020. It was very intense and short-lived, due not to the citizens’ waivers, but to the numerous tratments interrupted between March and May.
The recovery phases
In Figure 4, we can see the possible recovery phases characterizing the dental sector.
Let’s identify and analyze the six phases described in the model, and let’s make some reflections.
Pre Covid-19
The results obtained by the study about the last pre-Covid years should not be overlooked, as they are a key indicator of the sector business fundamentals. Obviously, if the clinic was under development and was in a financially prosperous position, it is very likely that it will recover more quickly, perhaps by increasing its market share, at the expense of those who already had problems in their own business, with declining results, difficulty in generating profit and financial weakness. For practices that were already having problems, the shock of this crisis could be lethal and some of them may decide to reduce their activity or close.
Lockdown
The almost total impossibility to access the clinic has had a devastating impact on their financial situation, as well as a long-term impact on the organizational system. Despite the possibility to benefit from payroll subsidies to reduce the impact of personnel expenses, during the three-month lockdown the dental practices’ owners had to incur the fixed costs, many of them by using their own resources and drawing upon personal assets, while some dentists have turned to banks for a loan. But these expenses will have to be recovered, or in any case, be returned to the family assets: it would therefore be appropriate to plan the profits for the next few years to calculate the payback times of the investment.
Technical rebound
The more-than-10-week total confinement halted an enormous amount of work, which poured into the clinics in the period May-September 2020, to carry out the suspended treatments and those for which patients had already decided. According to an accurate survey carried out by Key-Stone, the treatments remained blocked would have covered about 50 working days; the research was able to objectively affirm that at the resumption, in the second half of May, more than one billion euros treatments were resumed in the sector (more than 30,000 euros work to be completed on average per dental practice).
But it was a short-lived recovery. It must be remembered that, in the meantime, no new patients showed up for almost three months and new treatments took place only in the autumn, partially compromised by the lack of new visits in the previous period.
Prioritization needs
Since October 2020 there has been a new reduction in accessesand new patients compared to the same months of 2019, due to subsequent restrictions on mobility and increasing economic uncertainty. In this period, which will probably last until the end of spring 2021, the general performance has settled a few points below the results of 2019 and, as regards implantology, this reduction is quite important (on average -9% implants placed between October 2020 and February 2021 considering the same months of the previous year). Recovering from the emergency phase (and much will depend on how long the vaccination campaign will take), the workload will gradually increase, but for a few million families directly affected by the crisis -because of the impact on their job and financial situation- that mechanism of expenses hierarchization will be frequent, leaving part of the treatments still in difficulty. This is a phase whose duration is unknown, but observing the macroeconomic predictions made by relevant institutions, the clearest positive signs will probably occur in 2022. Those who manage a dental practice must take this aspect into account, since they could face a slowdown in recovery during this year, always compared to 2019, which is the reference year. In any case, this is a phase that will not last particularly long, but it is essential that the financial system of the clinic leaves room for a possibly extended resistance.
Physiological rebound
The procrastination of dental services for over a year generates a huge “lung” of treatments that are finally performed over a long period of time (even years), as families recover an acceptable economic situation, trust in the future and, in part, in the event that the oral condition does not worsen in terms of urgency (as anticipated, this phenomenon has already been documented in the two-year period 2014-2015). It is therefore very likely to witness an expansive cycle which, like after the “Great Recession”, could last for at least a couple of years, with undoubted advantages for those dental practices which will be able to plan their business in an entrepreneurial way, combining trust -that I often mention as a fundamental ingredient to overcome this crisis- and financial planning/control capacity, not to forget the strategic vision contributing to a successful value proposition.
New normal
There are no clear forecasts on what the health situation, social dynamics and economic weight of the different sectors will be in the endemic period.
Certainly, we cannot fall into the error of believing that the “new normal” is a return to the conditions prior to Covid-19. We are facing a radical transformation, thanks to which some fundamentals of the social organization and economic system will undergo profound changes. We all hope this evolution moves towards an improvement in life quality for an increasingly large part of the population.
In the new situation of normality, the demand for dental treatments could slow down its development following the physiological rebound resulting from the treatments procrastination (as happened in the three-year period 2017-2019). In actual fact, this may lead to what we indicate in the chart as baseline, which represents the level of demand we would probably have had without the impact of the pandemic.
Anyway, those who have worked well in recent years, investing in clinical skills, facilities, technologies, training, and entrepreneurial management, will probably find themselves in a more prosperous situation than the one in which they were before this shocking health catastrophe.
The economic impact of the pandemic on the dental sector proved to be dramatic but only during the first phase, which developed from March to May 2020 and in which government measures of lockdowns had often included the closing of dental practices. In this article, we will identify the trends in the dental industry for the consumable products and how these very trends can also help us better understand the dynamics of the demand for dental services.
Before discussing the trends that characterized the year of the pandemic, an introduction must be given explaining some of the market concepts that are taken for granted in the industry and distribution world but which could be less known by dentists and non-commercial operators.
First of all, it must be considered that the sector is divided into two large segments:
consumer products
equipment.
While the consumption of products is directly correlated with the number and type of dental treatments, therefore, the demand, investments in equipment are strongly conditioned by the climate of confidence and trust of dentists and dental technicians.
Remaining in the field of consumables, another much more technical issue concerns the difference between:
the retail business (also called “sell-out”), which refers to the purchases of dental practices and laboratories
the wholesale business (also called “sell-in”), which refers to sales through the distribution channel such as dental dealers.
It is true that the two businesses are directly related because as the demand for retail products increases, there is a demand by distributors for supply from manufacturers, however, this correlation is not always in sync because it largely depends on the stock of the dental dealers. This is exactly why sell-in and sell-out do not always move in sync and the purpose of this article is to also analyze how the pandemic has affected these two businesses in a different way.
Impact on demand
Here in Europe, we find ourselves in a condition where precise data regarding the demand for dental services are missing, but the real possibility to analyze the evolution of the numbers and types of dental treatments is to evaluate the trends in the purchases of consumer dental products by dentists.
Therefore, if we consider the evolution of the consumption by dentists during the pandemic (excluding products mainly related to Covid-19, such as those for hygiene, PPE, and disposables in general), we can acquire a fairly clear idea of what the demand for dental treatments was. Even if dentists had possibly reduced their inventories during the period of greatest financial stress, in the long term of a year, the consumptions (of products such as impression materials, cements, restorative products, endodontics, anesthesia, etc.) are strongly correlated to the influx of patients to clinics and so we can declare that the trend curves relating to the business of consumable products can be very similar to those of the dental sector in general.
The Italian and Spanish markets
Currently, the Key-Stone research institute, specializing in dental research at a global level, measures the dental retail markets through the “Sell-out Analysis” research in just four European countries (Italy, Poland, Portugal, and Spain) but with the advent of the pandemic, in particular for the Italian and Spanish markets, a monthly analysis was carried out, based on the sales data of a sample of dental dealers covering over 70% of sales in each of the two countries (the total sales of 2019 of the panel of dealers exceeded 500 million euros in Italy and 220 million euros in Spain).
As we can see in Figure 1, which indicates the monthly trends of the two countries, the evolution of the business activity is quite similar. The trends presented are those of the accumulated value up to December, also indicated as “year to date”, while for January and February 2021 the so-called MAT “Moving Annual Total” is indicated, namely, the 12 months “March 20-February 21″ vs ” March 19-February-20 “, which we would consider the true first full year of the pandemic compared to the previous 12 months.
It is worth noting that these are two countries that have had a very similar digression of the pandemic in terms of timing and with respect to the political choices of confinement, and unfortunately, for the incidence of infections and deaths concerning the population. Italy activated a total lockdown 10 days before Spain did but, apart from this, the similarities are very high. Even dental and welfare systems are the same, with a weight of over 90% of the private sector, even though the DSO (Dental Service Organizations) channel in Spain, namely that of the dental chains, carries a greater weight than in Italy.
As can see in Figure 1, referring to the trend in the consumption by dentists, excluding products related to Covid-19, while Spain had already started the 2020 year with a slight decrease, which was a mere 2% in the first two months, Italy instead registered a growth of 2% in the same period. This issue is very interesting since the two markets experienced, and continue to experience, their own development dynamics regardless of the pandemic. Italy was in a stagnant or slight growth situation and Spain was already suffering from a recessionary condition linked mainly to a crisis situation that had emerged in the DSO channel, in particular, with the sudden closing of an important brand. Overall consumptions in Spain were therefore already in decline and, following the lockdown, the business recovery continues to hover around 3 points lower than in Italy.
But let us see what the trend curves of these two countries tell us. First of all, the lowest moment of the market was reached in May 2020. It should be reminded that almost all of the dental practices in both countries completely shut down, carrying out only some urgent therapies, but in the month of April, product purchases had reached minimum levels. After the reopening from the total lockdown, starting at the end of May, we had witnessed a sudden and positive recovery of the market. To explain this strong rebound in the months following the reopening of practices, however, we must consider that the average portfolio of works that remained suspended due to the lockdown was very important (estimated to be about 112 days of works to be recovered). An estimated value of treatments of about 1.2 billion Euro that was suspended in March in Italy and just under 1 billion Euro in Spain meant a true “economic buffer” useful for the relaunching of the dental business, which, however, was also able to count on the access of new patients in the practices; patients who had problems during the lockdown or who made the decision to carry out new treatments. The recovery of those months looks to be rather robust and was promptly monitored by Key-Stone through the analysis on the purchases of consumable products by dentists.
Following the first strong recovery, the growth trend returned to almost zero in the autumn and with the second wave of the pandemic, despite dental practices remaining open, the overall monthly level of purchases (November 2020 – February 2021) stabilized at around -3% in both countries. If we consider slight inflation with average increases of all prices, precisely measured through the “Sell-out Analysis” research, we can state that the level of the number of treatments during these months is about 5%-6% less compared to those of the same months of 2019 (the year 2019 was used for the comparisons) and this situation may persist at least until the health emergency ends and a substantial share of the population has been vaccinated.
Great opportunities
Remaining on the previously discussed topic, this crisis in product consumption clearly refers to segments that are not related to the pandemic, since the enormous development of hygiene and protection products is offsetting the business of the distribution system. As mentioned in the introduction, we must consider equipment and durable goods, in general, to be a market by itself. In this article, only the trends related to consumables are being considered; a separate article should be dedicated to the equipment. Therefore, we will limit ourselves to saying that until the trust of the operators (dentists and dental technicians) is regained it will be very difficult to return to pre-Covid levels but, paradoxically, thanks to investments in new technologies and the renovations of dental centers, it will be possible to accelerate the recovery of a dental practice’s business and intercept new opportunities that this catastrophe still offers.
In particular, it can be cited as great opportunities:
the greater importance attributed to health issues by the population
the renewed centrality of the relationship of trust with the dentist
the advent of digital technology in the clinical, organizational, and marketing fields.
the financial and strategic weakness of thousands of practices.
These weaknesses are especially typical of small practices run by older dentists, generally with a less proactive attitude, with the risk of suffering the crisis in demand as well as organizational and management problems due to the adoption of new safety protocols which, inevitably, lengthen the times of occupation of the practice and reduce hourly revenues.
Impact on the industry
Now, let us return to talking about consumer products and their impact on business, this time, on that of the industry. As mentioned in the introduction, in the case of wholesale sales, the issue of warehouse inventories cannot be ignored. An analysis of 2018 financial statements of the dental dealers carried out by Key-Stone, demonstrates how inventories are worth just under 20% of the total purchases. Therefore, it is pretty standard to observe trends in the purchases of distributors which, although related to the retail sales, can show very different dynamics, especially with regards to the timing with which stocks are replenished.
What occurred during the lockdown was a true stop in the purchases of dental dealers which, in the face of serious unknown economic and financial difficulties due to the sudden block of the market, used as much as possible their stocks, and reduced purchases to the bare minimums, thus taking the risk of a reduction in the level of customer service but guaranteeing good financial resistance.
Key-Stone manages an international panel made up of the main manufacturers in the chemical consumable sector (impression materials, cements, restorations, prophylaxis, etc.), consisting of companies that had a turnover of over 800 million euro at sell-in in 2019 in Europe and it was possible to replicate the same exercise explained previously on the retail markets of Italy and Spain, by carrying out a monthly analysis of the sell-in sales in all European countries. Considering these 800 million euros, we can reasonably assume that approximately 150 million euros of the total inventories were normally stored in the warehouses of dealers throughout Europe.
The six important dental markets in Europe
In this article, we briefly present the results of the six most important markets in terms of business activities, whose total turnover in 2019 was approximately 520 million euros; these are Benelux, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom.
First of all, in Figure 2 we can see the sell-in trends on a monthly basis (trend of the month compared to the same month of the previous year, also called “Year over Year”), with a hefty collapse in purchases by distributors of all Europe (this phenomenon does not in fact concern only these countries), which in the months of April and May 2020 suffered its lowest point, after a month of January that had already started with a reduction, even though it was a technical phenomenon given the fact that the month of January is always considered quite inconstant over the years with regards to wholesale sales.
Only in the month of July did we witness the first positive figures of a second-half which, with its ups and downs, continued to grow slightly. It wasn’t until the months of January and February 2021 that we were able to witness a full recovery in the purchases of dental inventories; whose growth is a very evident sign of the replenishment of the inventories.
The analysis of the cumulated sales values allows us to observe how the slight overall recovery in the second half of 2020 and the large increase in the first two months of 2021 are certainly not enough to fill the negative gap accumulated in the full year of 2020.
Figure 3 allows us to observe how, thanks to the purchases during the first months of 2020, the lowest point of the total business is indicated at the end of the first half, while the retail sales analyzed previously for Italy and Spain indicated its historical minimum levels in May. However, and once again, this is determined by the purchasing policies of dealers across Europe, who at the most serious moment of the crisis had reacted by almost completely blocking their purchases, therefore, using their inventories to respond to the very weak demand during the months of lockdown.
Despite the good performance of the channel in the first months of 2021, it is interesting to point out that in February the overall value of the last 12 months of analysis shows a trend of -16%. This signifies that, most likely, the warehouse inventories of European distributors have been restored and during the 2021 year the sell-in sales will be consistent and aligned with retail ones, net of any new extraordinary situations due to the pandemic. In any case, we have isolated the sell-in of Italy in the graph in order to closely observe the correlations with the retail analysis shown previously. Once again, the trend curve is consistent but Italy shows a worse trend than the average and its retail one, indicating the strong phenomenon of destocking in this country. In Italy, the final result of the December sell-out at -15% (see Figure 1) is better than that of Spain (-18%) but despite this, the result of the Italian sell-in is much worse than the Spanish one as shown in Figure 4 (-31% vs -20%). This is simply another sign of the large warehouse inventories that were used by Italian dealers during the pandemic. On the other hand, the sell-in of Spain is consistent with the European average trend.
For now, if we carefully look at the analysis of the results of the full year, we can see how 2020 was truly a disastrous year for the dental industry, with closure at -22% in the total of the six markets analyzed and a -17% in all of Europe, thanks to the positive performance of Russia (+6% in local currency and -8% in euro) among the other main countries not analyzed in this article.
At the end of the year, the UK and Italy are the countries with the most evident collapse and, without a doubt, the two countries that also experienced the most dramatic impact of the pandemic during the first part of 2020, with the highest incidence of Covid cases and deaths. However, apart from the health implications in these countries, a certain weakness of the distribution system and a high level of inventories had probably contributed greatly to the sharp reduction in industry sales. In the UK, even the weight of public services, heavily involved in the management of the pandemic, may also have played an important role.
In any case, in February 2021 we can already see a big recovery in all the markets. In the green bars of Figure 5, we see the result of the first two months of 2021 compared to the same of 2020 (2021 Feb. YTD) and we can observe growth rates that are not compatible with those of the retail sales but clearly related to the replenishment of inventories. However, all of this will not be sufficient to recover all the business lost in 2020: in the red bars, in fact, we can see the trend of the last 12 months (2021 Feb. MAT) compared to the overall sales of 2019 and returning again to the -16% (OVERALL) already presented in Figure 3.
However, it is worth noting there is a certain heterogeneity in the recovery: markets such as the Benelux and France in particular, indicate acceptable overall declines for the rolling year (2021 Feb. MAT), and it is likely that in 2021 they will recover the values of 2019. However, it would be useless to deny that in absence of a true recovery in retail sales, and without a robust increase in the demand for dental treatments, a slowdown could inevitably occur starting in the spring of 2021.
A new phase
There is no doubt that as soon as the pandemic situation improves, reasonably in the second half of the year, a new phase will open. However, we must not think there will be an immediate recovery because, on the one hand, there will be another new economic rebound for just a few months, due to the essentiality of the dental treatments, for which an interruption or reduction of those treatments generates a subsequent expansion phase of a certain amount, but on the other hand, we will find ourselves in the face of a medium-term scenario (from 3 to 5 years) featured by a structural economic recession, with several economic sectors in severe crisis and a very severe impact on the employment levels of all the countries of the European area, especially those that were already structurally weak from a macroeconomic point of view.
In this regard, Key-Stone is preparing a new “post-pandemic outlook” report in which more precise forecasts will be made on the future dynamics of the market, but we can anticipate that a recovery of the 2019 value levels is estimated (even in regard to implantology – which had experienced a dramatic decline – and investments in technologies) only partially in the year 2022 and fully in the year 2023 throughout Europe.
Previous international crises, and the 2008–2013 crisis in particular, have arisen from the collapse of the economic or financial system at the macroeconomic level, having an impact on businesses (for example, through the resulting credit crunch) and society, especially as a consequence of the resulting rise in unemployment. It is quite evident that all this has an impact on the real economy, or the purchasing power of families, creating a sharp drop in demand. All of this happened in the Western world in the 2008–2013 period. However, in the current case, it is different.
A crisis of interconnections
The economic and financial systems in Europe and the US were rather solid before the SARS-CoV-2 outbreak, being in full economic recovery and boasting positive fundamental indicators. What suddenly emerged with the pandemic was a crisis of interconnections or the impossibility of supplying and selling products and services owing to the need for physical distancing. In the lockdown phase, every country halted about 60% of its productive activity, causing an enormous economic shock, the magnitude of which is proportional to the lockdown duration. However, the origin is exogenous to the system, a sort of huge economic downturn that has struck the world.
It is precisely for this reason that, at the beginning, many economists thought that, when the external cause ceased, that is, at the end of the respective lockdowns, the economy would recover quickly. Experts call this a V-shaped recession, which is characterised by a rapid initial collapse, followed by a rapid subsequent recovery, and it was expected that the impact would have been limited as a direct consequence of the lockdown period. However, this was a rash and probably superficial evaluation because it did not take into account that the handling of the endemic phase would still have required a very long period of physical distancing, having evident consequences for the purchasing power of families and consumption.
Figure 1: Critical factors of an economic crisis
In addition to the economic and financial problems that have affected and will affect the production system, and small and medium-sized businesses, in particular, the methods of socialization have radically changed. On the one hand, we need to maintain a certain physical distance, and on the other, attitudes, behaviors, and prejudices are changing, and these will possibly result in an increase in social unrest. Given that this new way of life will partly reduce consumption owing to incapacity and production saturation, what interests us in this context is the possible transformation of the perception of dental practices and dental care by the population.
Dental practices situation
There has been clear and peremptory guidance for dental practices from competent institutes. We think that implementation of these principles, which provide for certain clinical protocols, patient management and the use of personal protective equipment, may be quite demanding in organisational and financial terms, but we believe that all practices will adopt them in order to guarantee the safety and health of their staff, collaborators and patients.
In all sincerity, we must always keep in mind that dentists have always worked in almost totally aseptic conditions. It is true that, in this case, we are dealing with pathogens that circulate by air, while dental practices have evolved to prohibit cross-contamination through blood, but the protective measures employed by dental professionals are already very high. The culture of protection and asepsis is already innate in the professionalism of workers in the dental field, and we firmly believe it will come naturally to employ more rigorous procedures.
As for patients, given that the relationship with a dentist is based on trust, we think it is very important to explain the procedures and devices adopted with available objective data while confirming the requisite behavior, focused on everyone’s safety.
Our qualitative research indicates that, when a dental expense exceeds about €1,000, it is no longer the individual choice of the patient, but enters into the basket of various family expenses. The expense is then evaluated and ranked according to other family needs, which are not always related to health. Clearly, non-urgent and higher value-added services, such as orthodontics and prosthetics, could more easily be postponed, but, according to dentists interviewed in April, treatments for aesthetic purposes will suffer above all, while those that solve functional problems may be less affected.
Given that all of this will have to be demonstrated, there is no doubt that, in a Maslowian theory, on a hypothetical scale from pain to pleasure (for socialising, a sense of belonging and esteem to others and to oneself) in the case of reduced financial possibilities or psychological resistance, therapies aimed at aesthetics will be the ones that may initially be reduced, because they are less compelling (Fig. 1).
What practice should do is learn how to sell. This is not unethical; we must put aside all the false prejudices related to semantics which could generate negative reactions. Learning how to sell signifies the greater effectiveness of transferring value in the proposal of treatments so that the patient clearly understands the importance of the treatment being proposed and fairness concerning the treatment cost. There are too many instances in which families postpone dental treatments in order to prioritize other non-health-related expenses in the hierarchy of family expenses. Even consumer credit, carried out with the support of credit institutions, is a good opportunity for encouraging access to patient care.
The paradigm of reopening
It is fundamental to accept that we will no longer be able to return to the dental profession as it was back in March. The organizational system will be different, patients will be different and certain costs will inevitably increase. If we cannot endure the acceptance of this change, this veritable rebooting of the dental profession will prove difficult.
Figure 2: The strategic path to reopening dental practices
The dental practice has three important assets:
its clinical expertise
its organization (understood as structure, technologies, group of people, processes)
its base of patients; ideally, all the patients treated in the last three to five years represent a referral source for a conventional practice. However, it is different for corporate dentistry, which is more oriented towards the use of marketing to attract new patients.
Nowadays, just over 75% of the turnover of a dental practice that has been open for at least five years is generated by “known” patients, that is, those who have been treated in the past and their relatives. Therefore, it is necessary to maintain and retain the great value represented by patients treated in the past.
Following this logic, there are three phases to reopening (Fig. 2):
resist
relaunch
redesign
Resist
The real problem with this first phase of the crisis is the lack of liquidity, which arises from the lack of revenue in the previous months and the impact of fixed costs in this period. Let us try to rationalize this situation. In Europe, dental procedures valued at more than €7 billion are performed per month. During the lockdown phase, treatments worth at least €12 billion have been suspended, not canceled, because millions of patients under treatment have been asked not to visit their dentist (according to Key-Stone surveys, the average duration of dental treatment is about 112 days, orthodontics excluded). They were undergoing treatments that must be resumed as soon as possible and in total safety. Then, millions of patients suffer oral health problems and they will have to visit a dentist in the coming months. Net of a possible reduction in spending power and patients’ increased fear of the dentist, dental treatments are not consumable; they are not meals that were not consumed in a restaurant or nights not spent in a hotel. The population will return to the dentist, but timelines and ways will change.
For a dental practice that has not collected revenue during the lockdown period and does not have variable costs (such as laboratory, materials and medical collaborators), but has had to bear fixed costs (such as rent, utilities and staff), the latter is the true problem. In addition to supporting his or her family, the owner of a dental practice has had to cover the fixed costs.
Given that social safety nets, such as the use of lay-offs, can help reduce staff costs, we suggest classifying fixed costs into three categories:
costs that are indispensable and for which payment cannot be postponed
costs for which payment can be deferred
non-essential costs that can be eliminated during this phase.
Costs do not include investments, which are essential for improving a practice’s effectiveness and efficiency, which will eventually play a strategic role in the coming months of recovery.
With regard to revenue, another important operation during the resistance phase is to create a prevision of the treatments, considering those suspended, those that could be fulfilled from proposals that had been made to patients and are pending a response, and new visits planned, not to mention all the patients to be re-contacted for hygiene visits and check-ups, children under orthodontic monitoring, patients for whom implants have been fabricated and who require prostheses, and so on.
A prevision must be updated every month, but allows one to know in advance, net of all variable and fixed costs, the probable financial requirements. These are requirements to be met by resorting to bank loans and/or personal assets. Non-financing during this phase of the crisis means heading towards a possible closure, an eventuality declared in 14% of the sample of dentists interviewed in recent Key-Stone research (in Italy and Spain), a percentage that rises proportionally with the increasing age of the practice owner.
In addition to securing the dental practice from a financial point of view, it is essential to guarantee safety and health security to patients and collaborators, but this will certainly become an obligation and, therefore, a prerequisite. What will make the difference is a practice’s ability to organise the workflows and processes to avoid mishaps, such as overcrowding, but also excessive downtime resulting from an excess of caution without proper planning.
Relaunch
Returning to the issue of the great patrimony of the practice, represented by patients treated in recent years, it is essential to look after it through an organised system of direct communication. It is very important to have a well-managed patient database, allowing segmentation of patients by age and treatments carried out, among others. It is just as essential that the management of this database complies with the requirements of the new European General Data Protection Regulation.
In this phase, it is important to maintain relationships through WhatsApp, email, videos, calls, and social networks. But what is important is the content of this communication aimed at informing patients, reassuring them about everything that is being carried out regarding their health and safety, and giving practical suggestions for oral and general health and for living a healthy lifestyle. While it is absolutely not recommended to generate communications aimed at selling services or treatments—it is not the opportune time for sales—it is the time, the opportunity, to strengthen your relationship of trust with patients. Similarly, it would be useless to produce information aimed at promoting services which, during this emergency phase, could appear anachronistic or not suited to the current priorities of the population.
Another important time is reopening. When a dental practice is ready to assist new patients, it would be opportune to communicate this and, in this case, even encourage visits. In this regard, in addition to revenue suspended during the lockdown phase, a very serious aspect to consider is that, during this period, new patients have not been acquired and new treatment plans and new treatment plan proposals have not been realized. This is a problem that will be felt in the coming months, even in this autumn season. For this reason, practices must absolutely maintain a space for the creation of new visits, although they may possibly find themselves in a crowded situation due to treatments that were left uncompleted or suspended.
Similarly, during the relaunch phase, once a practice has reopened, it becomes a priority to return to pending treatment plan proposals, for which is essential to obtain the highest possible acceptance rate. While considering possible demotivation by some patients, we suggest not soliciting responses to suspended proposed treatment plans with simple phone calls but inviting the patients to come back, to carry out a new motivational visit that serves the purpose of renewing awareness of the need and the reduction of any prejudices in order to favor the acceptance of the treatment plan.
Redesign
New organizational protocols will deeply change the organizational model of the practice, and this is precisely the time to collect data and information, consider your practice’s strengths and weaknesses, and evaluate opportunities and threats. It is also time to consider what emotional, organizational, and financial resources are available and which may be necessary with the goal of structuring a virtuous business model for dentistry to come.
Asking questions about changing the competitive system, re-evaluating the positioning and pricing policy, and deciding what your practice should look like in the future are fundamental steps and must be thought through calmly, reasonably, and creatively.
The dental practice owners need to consider for reopening the following factors:
Treatment demand
Regulatory compliance
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) procurement
Workflow organization
Staff: commitment, motivation, conflicts
Impact on timeline
Saturation and productive potential
Functional investments
New composition of the revenue account
Pricing and cost policies
We believe that the truly great problem in the coming months, or perhaps years, will not be so much that of demand for treatment, nor the purchasing power of families, but that of the objective capacity of dental practices because there is no doubt that fewer patients will be able to be accommodated within the same number of work hours.
Planning the future
In order to survive this first stage unharmed, we must start to think about 2022. While the present year is economically lost, we can use it to plan for the future. Next year will also be difficult because we will most likely still be bound by physical distancing and rigid protocols in patient management. Even the economic and social crisis may continue to have a long and clearly visible tail. However, there is a great opportunity to return to performing excellent and successful dentistry in a new competitive context and with the payback of the trusting relationship. Everyone must have his or her own vision of the future and commit to fulfilling it with confidence and trust.
We would like to offer just one suggestion: do not make hasty decisions. Use the next few months, at least until the end of the summer, to collect information, taking note of problems, flaws, and areas of improvement. Use this period as if it was a beta phase for the practice. First, we need to fully understand, then design, and then build. If we change the order of these factors, the risk of failure increases.
During this time, we have come to realize that the key is not hope but trust. The first refers to something that should come to us from the outside, while trust derives from that intimate feeling that whatever happens it will be faced in the best possible manner, for we believe in ourselves and we have used a rigorous method of strategy development.
The article has been published on Dental Tribune in Italian and English.