Hi all - I have lived in Stockholm for like 12 years and most of this time relied on my old dentist in my home country, but since the onset of the pandemic I have, embarrassingly, not seen a dentist at all, and now I needed some pretty urgent dental work done.
The urgent work got done, but is more work that needs to be done soon. However, the dentist told me that I needed to first go see a dental hygienist for a cleaning procedure, only then could I book an actual dental examination to decide what work I need done when. The catch is that while the waiting time for a dentist are modest, waiting times for a cleaning procedure can be considerable - up to a month or more.
That seemed extremely odd and backwards to me. In my head, the high-effort and high-urgency work should be done first, then the polish later. But the dentist assured me that these were national Swedish rules, and that there was nothing to do about it - I needed cleaning first, then examination, then repairs, in that order.
So now I ask you, dear Sweddit: Is this really correct? Does national law really dictate that I need to go through this song and dance, potentially wasting months, when I know for a fact that I have cavities that need repair?
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The original was posted on /r/sweden by /u/thriveth at 2023-07-08 15:22:31+00:00.
Charkel_ at 2023-07-09 04:11:12+00:00 ID:
jr8lhe1
thriveth (OP) at 2023-07-09 10:01:16+00:00 ID:
jr9d6e8
Charkel_ at 2023-07-09 10:54:28+00:00 ID:
jr9h1cw
Oh you're Danish. That explains everything.
You still get your 40 minutes or whatever if you can manage to book it before 6 months from now it's more getting into the booking system that is the problem not that they don't got time to care for you when you are in the chair. Some folktandvård has shorter waits some have more. Call around all the förorter etc