• 16 : The Partner Behind the Practice: How Comfort Dental Helps Doctors Actually Own Their Future
    Apr 17 2026
    Dr. Matthew Carlston has been with Comfort Dental for 22 years. He grew up in Salt Lake City and decided to become a dentist after overhearing two dentists at a bank talk about buying a private island. The island never happened, but he built a career he says he would not trade. Today he recruits the next generation of Comfort Dental doctors, talking with dental students and early-career dentists across the country every week.In this conversation with Shawn Zajas, Dr. Carlston walks through how he found Comfort Dental as a fourth-year dental student, the conversation with his wife that sealed the move to Denver, and why so many of the dentists he talks to are stuck five to seven years into their careers without realizing it.He is honest about the hard parts of the profession. Dentists are uncomfortable a lot, he points out, because the job puts you inside 18 inches of a stranger all day. He talks about the debt most dental graduates carry without fully understanding the math behind repayment. And he shares the common pattern he sees among dentists who look successful from the outside while carrying 80 percent overhead on beautiful offices that shut down every time they take a week off.Then he walks through what Comfort Dental actually is. Not a DSO. A network of doctor-owned practices that share marketing, share supply pricing, and share the partnership burden so no one carries it alone. He explains why 11 offices pooling marketing dollars in a single metro produces 35 to 40 new patients per month per doctor, why that volume makes doctors more clinically proficient, and why conservative treatment planning is actually easier when your schedule is full.On the patient side, he makes a case that should matter to anyone reading this. A dentist who has done 10,000 extractions is going to be more comfortable with your tooth than a dentist who has done 100. A practice that never closes because partners cover each other is a practice where your care does not get dropped when someone takes a week off. A front desk that asks “when can you be here” instead of “what is your insurance” is a front desk designed to get you in the chair.He also talks about the Gold Plan, Comfort Dental’s in-office discount program that tens of thousands of patients sign up for as an alternative to insurance. And he is candid about the moments he finds hardest: when a dentist outside Comfort Dental has built a beautiful practice, is burning out under 80 percent overhead, and cannot quite see the way out.Near the end, Shawn asks him where the best opportunities are right now for doctors listening. His answer: Santa Fe, New Mexico. Albuquerque. Aurora. Cherry Creek. And Comfort Dental Franchise dot com for anyone who wants to reach out directly.The most disarming moment in the episode is Dr. Carlston’s admission partway through: “I don’t love dentistry. I don’t know if many people do love dentistry. But practicing within Comfort Dental has made me like dentistry more than I would if I was practicing outside of it.” It is the most honest thing a dentist can say on a podcast, and it explains why he has stayed 22 years.Chapters:00:00 Why dentistry (and the private island story)02:34 The hidden cost of the profession07:00 Lifestyle versus income for young dentists08:11 Student debt and financial illiteracy in dental school11:22 How Dr. Carlston found Comfort Dental in his fourth year14:38 The flexible schedule most dentists never get17:42 Pooled marketing and 35 new patients a month21:30 Conservative treatment planning at volume24:57 The DSO misconception, addressed directly28:37 Why doctors stay their entire career33:38 Referral bonuses and classmate introductions36:16 Volume and quality: why more reps make better dentists40:44 The Lean and Mean philosophy and chief complaint conversations43:51 Why Comfort Dental is not a dental mill44:59 “When can you be here?” and barriers to care46:25 Who Comfort Dental is not a good fit for49:17 “I don’t love dentistry, but I like practicing here”51:38 Earning potential and average paychecks54:45 Two doctors who walked away from their own practices58:26 The top three open opportunities right now01:01:00 How to reach out to Dr. CarlstonConnect: Comfort Dental Franchise: comfortdentalfranchise.com
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    1 hr and 4 mins
  • 15 : You’re the Boss: How Dr. Rosas Puts Patients in Control of Their Care
    Apr 15 2026

    Dr. Jhossva Rosas grew up wanting to be an architect. Then his aunt and uncle, both dentists in Peru, changed his mind. He became the seventh dentist in his family.

    Today, Dr. Rosas practices at Comfort Dental South Federal in Denver, Colorado. He graduated from Tufts University School of Dental Medicine, where he won an award in prosthetics out of a class of 230. He has been practicing dentistry for over a decade and he is still expanding his skill set.

    His practice in Denver serves a community where 65 to 70 percent of patients rely on Medicaid. He wants it that way. From the beginning of his career in Peru, he has been drawn to patients who need care and do not have easy access to it. The Comfort Dental model, which accepts all insurance types including Medicaid, makes that kind of practice possible.

    In this episode, Dr. Rosas takes us through what a first visit actually looks like in his office. He shows patients their X-rays and intraoral photos before recommending any treatment. He spends 10 to 15 minutes explaining what he sees and walking through options. Then he tells every patient the same thing: you are the boss.

    He talks about dental anxiety and the tools he uses to help patients through procedures. Headphones. A stress ball. Jokes before the needle. He also calls patients at the end of every workday to check in after their procedures. Not a form. Not a text. A phone call.

    Dr. Rosas is bilingual and so is his entire team. Sixty to sixty-five percent of his patients are Spanish speakers. His associate, Dr. Farah Machi, is from Honduras. Every front desk staff member and every dental assistant in the office is bilingual. For Spanish-speaking patients in Denver, that is rare.

    He recently started placing dental implants and completed aligner training. He is heading to Brazil for an intensive implant course where he will place 20 to 25 implants in a single week.

    The moment that will stop you in this episode is the story he tells from his time in Peru. A patient who needed all his teeth extracted. Dentures made in advance. And the moment that patient looked at himself in the mirror and started to cry. Dr. Rosas got emotional retelling it. He says it is still the reason he shows up every day.

    Chapters:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:25 Why dentistry, and a family of seven dentists

    01:54 The artist vs. the scientist

    03:59 From Tufts to Denver

    04:35 What he loves most about dentistry

    05:32 His Denver practice and the patients he serves

    10:50 Why Comfort Dental takes all insurance types

    12:14 What a first visit looks like

    15:01 Handling dental anxiety

    17:28 Building a connection with every patient

    20:01 Common feedback after visits

    21:00 Fast wisdom tooth extractions and post-procedure calls

    23:10 The Gold Plan and affordability options

    25:51 Quality care at a lower cost

    28:20 Second opinions and same-day access

    29:43 Hours and accessibility

    30:25 What he wants anxious patients to know before coming in

    31:18 “It’s never too late”

    31:51 Biggest dental misconceptions

    34:07 Team culture and office vibe

    36:23 A fully bilingual practice

    37:58 Clear aligners at Comfort Dental

    39:30 Could the host use aligners?

    40:15 Dental implants: what patients should know

    43:17 Technology in dentistry: digital scanning, CBCT, lasers

    45:20 Patient stories

    47:06 The patient in Peru who cried

    51:18 One word his patients would use to describe him

    51:32 Outside dentistry: family and Peruvian cooking

    52:37 The meal he makes for celebrations

    53:59 Is Peruvian food spicy?

    54:54 Final message to prospective patients

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    54 mins
  • 14 : The Orthodontist Who Says Quality Doesn’t Have to Cost More
    Apr 10 2026

    Dr. Jared Stasi grew up in his father’s orthodontics office in Colorado. His dad was the orthodontist. His mom was the dental hygienist. They met in residency. By the time Jared was in high school, he had watched enough patients leave with new smiles that the path started to make sense. He went to Creighton in Omaha for dental school, married his childhood sweetheart in his second year, finished ortho residency, and moved back to Colorado to join Comfort Dental in Centennial. That was six years ago.

    Now he runs two locations: the main office in Centennial, about 25 minutes south of Denver, and a satellite location in Silverthorne, an hour and fifteen minutes up into the mountains. The Silverthorne office sees a population that is 80 to 90% Spanish-speaking. About 90% of his staff there are fluent in Spanish.

    In Centennial, his practice has shifted over six years from 75% kids to 55% kids, with adults now making up 45% of cases. A lot of those adults are people who had braces years ago, lost their retainer, and never got back in. Some are adults who couldn’t afford it the first time around.

    In this episode, Dr. Stasi talks through what a first visit actually looks like for a nervous kid, why the American Association of Orthodontists recommends a first evaluation at age seven, and how he explains x-rays and prep syringes to children in language that doesn’t scare them. He talks about the shift in adult orthodontics, the difference between braces and aligners, and what parents should know about the cost of doing nothing.

    He also shares a story that stays with him. A young boy with special needs who was non-communicative when he started treatment at eleven. Apprehensive. Didn’t engage. Two years later, his grandmother left a review. She wrote that her grandson was happy to smile now, and that he was talking, and that he had never done either of those things before. Dr. Stasi says that is what makes it worth it.

    Monthly payments at his Centennial office start at $100 to $150. Practices up the street in the same neighborhood charge five times that for a down payment alone.

    He finishes the conversation talking about his two-and-a-half-year-old son, his wife who works in cardiac surgery at the University of Colorado, and the second boy they were expecting in April. He works three days a week. He was home watching his son the day we recorded.

    If you are in the Centennial area and you have been told braces cost $10,000, come check them out first.

    Learn more at comfortdental.com.

    Timestamps:

    00:00 Introduction

    00:43 Why dentistry, and growing up in his father’s practice

    01:30 Childhood sweetheart, Creighton dental school, and a wife in cardiac surgery

    03:02 When he knew he made the right choice

    03:38 Orthodontics at Comfort Dental Centennial

    05:32 Affordability and accessibility in orthodontics

    07:20 What monthly payments actually cost

    08:28 Patient shock at the price difference

    09:48 Private practice style with corporate backing

    11:14 The psychology of orthodontics and self-esteem in kids

    12:21 The story of a nonverbal boy and his grandmother’s review

    13:28 Who his patients are (kids and adults)

    17:15 Adult ortho and aligners

    17:35 When should your child first see an orthodontist?

    19:29 Braces vs. clear aligners

    21:50 What drew him to orthodontics

    24:06 His dad’s practice and growing up around it

    26:06 Most challenging cases and jaw surgery

    30:10 AI and the future of orthodontics

    32:36 What he loves most about the work

    37:42 Dental anxiety in orthodontic patients

    40:02 What to expect on your first visit

    43:41 The communities his practice serves

    45:15 One word patients would use to describe him

    46:23 Every patient deserves confidence

    46:41 A message to patients in Centennial

    47:43 How Comfort’s economies of scale pass savings to patients

    48:59 The Silverthorne satellite location and Spanish-speaking patients

    49:55 What makes him smile outside of dentistry

    51:26 Work-life balance and being present for his family

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    54 mins
  • 13 : From Dunkin’ Donuts to Dental Care: Dr. Michael Rhees on Loving Patients in Colorado Springs
    Apr 8 2026

    Dr. Michael Rhees runs a Comfort Dental office in a former Dunkin’ Donuts in Old Colorado City, Colorado Springs. The building is a local landmark. The irony isn’t lost on him.

    In this episode of the Comfort Dental podcast, Dr. Rhees sits down with host Shawn Zajas to talk about what brought him to dentistry, why his practice sees 200 new patients a month, and how his team handles the reality that most of those patients haven’t been to a dentist in five to ten years.

    Dr. Rhees grew up with a serious heart condition that pointed him toward medicine. But he wanted a career where he could work with his hands, help people heal, and still be home for his kids. Dentistry fit. A mission trip to the Dominican Republic during dental school sealed it. He treated a young girl whose front tooth was black with decay. She’d been hiding her smile behind her hand. After a filling that took minutes, she smiled normally for the first time. That moment shaped how he practices today.

    His office in Colorado Springs sits in a part of town he describes as underserved for a long time. Patients come in with years of untreated problems, often scared, sometimes in pain, sometimes frustrated. His team’s approach is simple: meet them where they are. No judgment. No pressure. If a patient needs their hand held through the process, that’s what happens.

    Dr. Rhees has a standing rule in his office. If someone comes in with an infected tooth and can’t afford the extraction, his team does it anyway. Last year, the donated care added up to nearly $300,000.

    He walks through what a first visit looks like: you call, you get in fast (sometimes that same day), and the goal of that first appointment is to make a plan. Not to start poking. Not to pressure. The patient decides how fast or slow treatment goes.

    He talks about why root canals have a worse reputation than they deserve. His favorite patient compliment: “Wait, we’re done? That wasn’t as bad as I thought.”

    He explains why dental work doesn’t last forever, and why that doesn’t mean your last dentist did something wrong.

    And he shares what makes him smile outside the office: the gym, camping with his three kids in the Colorado mountains, and the knowledge that the best years of fatherhood are still ahead.

    When asked to finish the sentence “every patient deserves…” his answer is one word: respect.

    TIMESTAMPS

    00:00 Introduction

    00:28 Why dentistry? Heart condition, hands-on work, and wanting to be a good dad

    02:45 Two-year-old daughter makes a cameo

    03:37 Loving woodshop, science, business, and people

    06:00 The prototypical dentist: scientist, artist, and high EQ

    06:50 Mission trip to the Dominican Republic: the little girl who hid her smile

    10:27 The office in a former Dunkin’ Donuts in Old Colorado City

    11:45 200 new patients a month, most haven’t been in 5-10 years

    12:15 The dirty dishes analogy for putting off dental care

    13:42 Meeting anxious patients with compassion, not judgment

    17:00 Building a team oriented toward love and service

    19:20 High emotional intelligence across the whole staff

    20:19 Full range of services: cleanings, root canals, implants, dentures

    21:09 How the Comfort Dental model creates room for generosity

    24:15 The office rule: free extractions for patients who can’t afford them

    25:10 Nearly $300,000 in donated dental care last year

    27:15 What Dr. Rhees loves most: connecting with patients one-on-one

    29:05 Favorite compliment: “Wait, we’re done?”

    31:13 What to expect at your first appointment

    33:35 Patient is 100% in the driver’s seat

    34:05 Same-day and next-day availability, even if your other dentist is closed

    35:15 How he educates patients on treatment options without pressure

    38:22 The one thing he wishes every patient understood: momentum matters

    39:42 Biggest misconception: dental work doesn’t last forever

    41:31 Message to patients thinking about scheduling

    43:19 One word patients would use to describe him: nice

    44:34 Outside the office: gym, camping, and Colorado adventures with the kids

    48:03 Every patient deserves respect

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    50 mins
  • 12 : From Music Major to Full-Arch Dentistry: Inside Dr. Vetowich’s Comfort Dental Practice
    Apr 3 2026

    Dr. Michael Vetowich is one of Comfort Dental’s earliest partners, joining in 2000 as partner number 18. He practices near Boulder, Colorado, where he has spent more than two decades building a specialty in implant dentistry and oral surgery while keeping Comfort Dental’s core philosophy at the center of every patient visit.

    The episode opens somewhere unexpected: music. Dr. Vetowich studied English and music performance at the University of Michigan, has run a marathon in every adult decade of his life, and completed multiple Ironman triathlons. He came to Colorado for the skiing. He stayed because the Comfort Dental model made sense.

    From there, the conversation goes into what it actually feels like to practice dentistry every day. Dr. Vetowich does not pretend it is easy. He talks about the emotional reality of working with patients who tell you they hate being there, and he explains the “floor” he has built: a minimum standard of professionalism and compassion that holds regardless of what any patient brings into the room.

    Then the patient-facing content takes over. He walks through the three questions every patient is really asking when they walk in: How much will it cost? How long will it take? Will it hurt? He explains how his practice answers all three, and what he says to patients who come in embarrassed because it has been a long time since their last visit. His answer is direct: “I’m not here to make judgments. I’m here to try and help you.”

    The episode covers the full range of care his practice offers, from general dentistry to implants and full-arch cases using 3D printing and digital surgical planning. He talks about seeing a patient’s smile on screen before a single procedure begins, and about trying to bring that level of care to patients at a more affordable price point than they would find elsewhere.

    He makes the oral health and systemic health connection in about a minute: diabetes, heart disease, high blood pressure, all tied to what is happening in your mouth. He makes the case for flossing in about 20 seconds. And he tells the story of a carpenter in his 40s with a broken-down smile who went through a full-arch procedure and gave him the biggest hug when it was done.

    The episode closes with two answers that say everything. One word to describe what patients would say about him: passionate. Finish this sentence, every patient deserves: dignity.

    Timestamps:

    0:01 - Why dentistry: art, music, and wanting to help people

    3:32 - Marathons, cross country, and Ironman triathlons

    5:10 - The emotional reality of practicing dentistry

    7:06 - The floor of professionalism: how Dr. Vetowich stays grounded

    8:55 - How he found Comfort Dental in 2000

    10:37 - The three questions every patient is really asking

    11:35 - Addressing dental fear and anxiety head-on

    12:10 - What a first visit actually looks like

    13:24 - Affordability options and the Gold Plan

    14:46 - No upselling: patients choose their level of care

    15:46 - Implants, oral surgery, and full-arch dentistry

    17:24 - The Da Vinci Curse and choosing mastery over dabbling

    19:14 - 3D printing, Exocad, and seeing your smile before treatment

    20:20 - Why patients may not know what is available in-house

    21:09 - What gets him out of bed: alleviating suffering

    23:11 - What new patients usually say

    24:02 - “I’m not here to judge you”

    24:52 - Practice culture with partner Jack Moss

    26:09 - Two dentists who also play music together

    27:45 - What he wishes every patient knew about timing their care

    28:20 - Oral health and systemic health: the connection

    29:27 - The real answer to most dental problems

    30:42 - The carpenter story

    33:00 - Focusing on the 19 patients who smiled

    34:03 - What he would say to someone thinking about scheduling

    35:01 - One word: passionate. Every patient deserves dignity.

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    38 mins
  • 11 : The DNA Examiner Who Became a Dentist: Dr. Todd Crandall of Comfort Dental Durango
    Apr 1 2026

    Dr. Todd Crandall was not planning on dentistry. He had a master’s degree, eight years as a forensic DNA examiner, four kids, and a salary that required him to call his dad when his car got a flat tire. At 37, he decided to change careers. He graduated from CU Dental in 2016, moved to Durango with his wife and five kids, and opened Comfort Dental there in 2018.

    Before he opened, he and his wife called every dental office in town to ask whether they accepted Medicaid. Two did. Both had a year-long waiting list. That gap is why he came to Durango.

    In this episode, Shawn sits down with Dr. Crandall to talk about what his practice actually looks like from the patient’s side. About 60% of his patients are on Medicaid. About 60% of his staff are Navajo. His office sees patients within days, sometimes the same day. He explains how the Comfort Dental Gold Plan works for patients without insurance and what the real price difference is compared to a private dental office.

    He also talks about the patients who waited too long and what it cost them. He talks about dental fear, the 50-50 split between financial avoidance and bad past experience, and what he tells patients who haven’t seen a dentist in years. He shares a case where 18 months of facial pain resolved in two days with a tiny occlusal adjustment. And he talks about the sailboat he has been restoring in South Carolina, the family’s upcoming trip up the Intracoastal Waterway, and the one word he hopes his patients use when they describe him.

    What you’ll hear in this episode:

    1. Why a forensic DNA examiner went to dental school at 37
    2. What convinced Dr. Crandall to open a practice in Durango
    3. How Comfort Dental handles same-day and emergency access
    4. What the Gold Plan costs and who it’s for
    5. Why 50% of dental avoidance comes down to past bad experiences
    6. What patients with no insurance actually pay for a crown
    7. The 18-month facial pain case that resolved in two days
    8. What makes the Durango practice culture different from other offices
    9. The sailboat in South Carolina and the coastal trip coming this spring

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    52 mins
  • 10 : “Are You Nervous? Me Too.” How Dr. Browning Breaks Down Dental Fear
    Mar 27 2026
    Dr. Donovan Browning wanted to be a medical doctor until he watched a girl cover her smile every time she laughed. That moment changed everything. He walked away from medicine and into dentistry with one goal: give people a smile they feel proud of.Twenty years later, Dr. Browning practices at Comfort Dental in Oklahoma, where he has built a reputation for making the dental chair one of the least scary places you will sit all day. He walks in wearing short-sleeve scrubs, shows off his tattoos, cracks jokes while he works, and tells nervous patients "Are you nervous? Me too." before they even open their mouth.But this episode goes deeper than humor. Dr. Browning grew up watching his mother get medicated before every dental visit. He saw firsthand what dental fear does to people. Early in his career, he wore a shirt and tie, kept things formal, and found the job stressful. He was a self-described late bloomer. Over time, he dropped the formality, stopped pretending, and started showing up as himself. Everything changed.Now he puts the person before the tooth. He spends the first few minutes of every appointment getting to know his patients as people. He asks about their lives, shares his own, and does not touch a single tooth until they feel comfortable. For patients who have not been to the dentist in years and feel embarrassed about their mouth, he pauses, puts a hand on their shoulder, and tells them it is okay. For a patient grieving a family death, he started the appointment with a hug.In this conversation, Dr. Browning shares the story of a man who avoided the dentist for over 20 years. The pain finally drove him into the office. He was terrified. By the end of the appointment, he was laughing with his mouth open while Dr. Browning worked on him. He left saying he could not believe that was what a dental visit could feel like.Dr. Browning also explains his approach to treatment planning. He does not tell patients what they need. He asks them what they want. His line: "You're driving the car. I'm in the passenger seat and I have the map. You tell me where you want to go. I'll get you there." He builds treatment plans around what the patient wants, within what they can afford, without pressure or arm-twisting.He talks about how Comfort Dental's pricing and Gold Plan make dental care accessible to people who might not fit into other practices. He describes working with patients on cost when they want to get something done but cannot quite make ends meet. And he talks about why the volume of patients at Comfort Dental has made him a better clinician through sheer repetition and variety.The conversation also covers what happens when a patient crosses a line. Dr. Browning does not tolerate anyone disrespecting his team. He has kicked patients out of the practice for talking down to staff or making inappropriate advances. His team knows he will stand up for them the same way they show up for him.He shares the story of an emergency patient who came in with a severe infection another dentist had not resolved. The swelling was so bad Dr. Browning could not even get into his mouth. Instead of billing him for an emergency visit and sending him on his way, Dr. Browning spent 40 minutes with him, wrote a letter to the ER attending, and told him to go to the hospital immediately. The patient was admitted for days and went into surgery. Dr. Browning went home that night and told his wife the day was worth it because of that one patient.Dr. Browning closes the episode with a direct message to anyone who has been putting off dental care: "It's not gonna be like the experiences you've had. It doesn't have to be a nightmare. They'll treat you like family. They'll love you. They're not gonna judge you."Every patient deserves good care.TIMESTAMPS 00:00 - The moment patients cry happy tears 00:01 - Meet Dr. Donovan Browning 00:02 - The girl who covered her smile and changed his career 00:03 - Why dentistry is both science and art 00:06 - From shirt-and-tie stress to showing up as himself 00:08 - His mother's dental fear and how it shaped his approach 00:09 - The patient who avoided the dentist for 20 years 00:12 - "Are you nervous? Me too." 00:15 - Why the person in the chair matters more than the tooth 00:16 - Building a team culture patients can feel 00:19 - What a new patient visit looks like 00:21 - Helping embarrassed patients feel safe 00:24 - Kicking out patients who disrespect his team 00:26 - Treatment planning and affordability at Comfort Dental 00:30 - "You're driving the car. I have the map." 00:32 - The emergency patient he sent to the hospital 00:35 - What surprises patients most about Comfort Dental 00:44 - What makes Dr. Browning smile outside of dentistry 00:45 - His message to anyone afraid of the dentistLearn more at comfortdental.com
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    47 mins
  • 9 : Dr. Amy Hazen on Fear, Cost, and Why You Shouldn’t Wait to See the Dentist
    Mar 25 2026

    YOUTUBE DESCRIPTION: Dr. Amy Hazen | Comfort Dental Inglewood, CO

    Dr. Amy Hazen has been treating patients at her Comfort Dental in Inglewood, Colorado for over 12 years. In this episode, she sits down with Shawn Zajas to talk about what really happens during a first visit, how she handles patients who are terrified of the dentist, and why dental care at Comfort Dental costs less than most people expect.

    Dr. Hazen's approach with nervous patients starts with one idea: your first visit is a conversation. No surprises, no pressure. She tells anxious patients they're "just fact-finding" and lets them decide the pace from there. For patients who ask a lot of questions, she welcomes it. For patients who want to know nothing, she respects that too. Her goal is to meet each person where they are.

    On the cost side, Dr. Hazen breaks down how the Comfort Dental Gold Plan works for patients without insurance, reducing treatment fees by 30 to 40 percent across the board with no hidden conditions. She also talks about Cherry financing, which lets patients split payments over six months. One of the most common things she hears from new patients: the cost was about half of what they expected.

    Dr. Hazen also addresses what happens when you've been putting off dental care for years. Her message is straightforward. She's not looking backward. She wants to know what she can do for you going forward. No guilt, no lecture.

    For patients in pain, her office doesn't operate on a weeks-long waitlist. Her response to emergency calls: "How soon can you get here?" Her Inglewood location is open 12 hours a day and built to accommodate same-day visits.

    Outside the chair, Dr. Hazen is a mom, a home cook who never makes the same meal twice, and a bread baker who picked up the hobby before COVID made it trendy. Her 11-year-old son plays rugby and recently made a Denver select team headed to a tournament in Monaco.

    She also shares one of the moments that reminds her why she chose dentistry: handing a patient a mirror after placing new dentures and watching them burst into tears. Those moments, she says, are the most rewarding part of the job.

    TIMESTAMPS

    0:00 Introduction

    0:10 Why Dr. Hazen chose dentistry

    0:51 How a job at Comfort Dental confirmed her career path

    1:33 What she loves most about her daily work

    2:22 Life outside dentistry: cooking, baking, kids, and rugby

    3:22 Her son's rugby team headed to Monaco

    4:58 Why should a patient trust you with their teeth?

    5:37 What a first visit looks like for a nervous patient

    6:31 "We're just fact-finding today"

    7:26 Explaining treatment without jargon

    8:12 Do you like when patients ask a lot of questions?

    9:18 Every patient interaction is different

    10:22 Handling the unexpected in clinical care

    11:19 Staying present as a clinician when feedback is harsh

    12:21 Developing thick skin over the years

    13:33 What makes patients want to come back

    14:20 The most common reaction from first-time patients

    15:03 How Comfort Dental addresses cost concerns

    15:15 "That was nearly half of what I thought it would be"

    16:01 Financing options and the Gold Plan

    16:42 How the Gold Plan works for uninsured patients

    17:31 Transparent pricing with no hidden fees

    18:16 How Comfort Dental keeps quality high at lower prices

    19:06 Patients comparing quotes from other dentists

    19:57 Message to patients who've been avoiding the dentist

    20:26 The one thing she wishes every patient knew

    20:57 When patients wait too long to address a problem

    22:42 Biggest misconceptions about dental care

    23:38 The connection between oral health and overall health

    25:28 A story about dental pain vs. other pain

    26:35 Questions patients should ask their dentist

    26:52 The Inglewood community and who she serves

    28:05 Same-day emergency access: "How soon can you get here?"

    29:15 A patient story that reminds her why she loves dentistry

    30:06 When patients cry happy tears seeing their new smile

    30:48 What she's working on to improve the patient experience

    31:37 Where dentistry is headed for patient comfort

    32:20 Her team and practice culture

    33:05 One word her patients would use to describe her

    33:43 "Every patient deserves to be understood"

    34:27 A message to patients thinking about scheduling

    Dr. Amy Hazen practices at Comfort Dental in Inglewood, Colorado, located on South Broadway in Denver. Her office accepts Medicaid and is open 12 hours a day. New patients can call to schedule or walk in for same-day emergency care.

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    37 mins