The Big Brush Blog | Treloar & Heisel Insurance Products for Dental Professionals

Your New Dental Office Equipment Checklist

Written by Amy Carbone | Sep 28, 2020 1:00:00 PM

When you're stocking a new dental office, it's important to keep in mind that dental office equipment largely plays a utilitarian role. You need places to store medical devices, systems to keep things sterile and basic workhorse tools that you'll use every day in standard procedures.

The following dental office equipment checklist contains some of the basic items you might just overlook but won't be able to do without.

1. Chairs

Patient chairs are the backbone of any dental office. Typically, you want a chair that's comfortable for both you and the patient. A thin backrest allows dentists more maneuverability, and replaceable upholstery can extend the life of a chair so you can replace fabric covers instead of entire chair units. A good chair may last the lifetime of a practice. 

2. Cabinetry

This is where you'll store all the supplies and small devices you need to keep your practice functional. In an operatory, it’s important to have cabinets to store extra items like gloves and gauze. Cabinets tend to work well when they’re kept simple, ensuring that they’re easy to open, close, and clean. 

You can typically purchase cabinets from local cabinetmakers or premade units online. 

3. Lighting

Operatories need bright, focused dental lights — halogen or LED lighting tend to work well — to be able to see inside a patient's mouth, and they also need room lighting for general visibility. Soft lighting tends to work well for waiting rooms and reception areas as well, and natural light can play a large role in making your office feel open, airy, and comfortable. 

Using light to your advantage can help make procedures easier while keeping your patients feeling more positive at your practice. 

4. X-Ray Equipment

Today's dental offices use digital X-ray technology to share and store images with their patients. Among the equipment you may want to get: intraoral X-ray sensors (the replacement for film X-rays); digital panoramic X-rays; phosphor plate X-ray systems; and digital imaging software to serve as a management hub for organizing digital files.

5. Sterilization Equipment

Sterilization equipment is essential for preventing cross-contamination in your operatories. One of the most important pieces of sterilization equipment is an autoclave, which uses pressurized steam or dry heat to sterilize equipment. Some autoclaves can also keep a record of your infection control regime, which is a handy feature to have.

Aside from autoclaves, you can also stock up on high-grade disinfectants, general cleaning supplies, and — as always — soap.

6. Handpieces

Handpieces may be useful to the proper functioning of any dental office, used by hygienists and in both routine and specialized dental procedures. The ones you select — as well as the variety that you select — depends largely on the procedures you offer. You can find models that operate at different speeds to achieve a variety of functions and ones that are designed specifically for one function only.

7. Utility Equipment

Utility equipment keeps your dental practice running smoothly, providing air pressure, sterilizing steam, and other helpful functions that help keep your practice running. It may include lubricated and oil-free dental compressors, amalgam separators, separation tanks, vacuums, and utility control centers, among other equipment. 

8. Scrubs

Scrubs are one of those things that can help your dental office achieve a uniform look. A good way to handle this detail is to provide your employees with a uniform budget each year and give some specifications about color and style.

9. Consumables

Staff needs to wear personal protective equipment when performing any procedure where there is a risk of spray or splatter. In addition to surgical masks and nitrile gloves, you should also stock protective eye shields.

10. Computers

No dental office is complete without devices for storing digital files, displaying digital imagery, entering patient data, downloading forms, and communicating. Some practices also have tablets where patients can enter personal data that is downloaded directly into their digital file, rather than having them fill out paper forms, and some offer Internet-connected devices in waiting rooms for entertainment.

11. Waiting Room

Outfitting your dental office is a chance to develop your brand and what better place to make a first impression than your waiting room? Make your statement with furniture that is sleek and modern, homey and comforting, or anything in between. One pediatric dentist has a mechanical horse that kids can ride with tokens you get from the front desk. Plants, aquariums, the view outside, whatever the environment of your waiting room is, it helps to establish comfort and trust.

What Else Do You Need to Start a Practice?

Starting a practice and outfitting a dental office requires more than just equipment. 

To learn more about how you can start your practice, read our checklist to starting a new dental practice.

Treloar & Heisel and Treloar & Heisel Property and Casualty are divisions of Treloar & Heisel, LLC.

Insurance products are offered through Treloar & Heisel, LLC.

This content is intended for general informational purposes only and is not to be construed as advice.

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