The Journal of the American Dental Association
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J Am Dent Assoc, Vol 131, No 6, 734-744.
© 2000 American Dental Association

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COVER STORY

Practicing Dentistry in the Age of Telemedicine



DANIEL T. GOLDER, D.D.S., M.B.A. and KATHLEEN A. BRENNAN, D.D.S., J.D.

Background. This article examines teledentistry and some of its current legal issues. Topics include licensure, malpractice, technology and ethics. General recommendations for the dental practitioner are included. The literature review includes state and federal laws, the Telemedicine Report to Congress and numerous articles (both printed and electronic) associated with the topic. Sources were selected for timeliness and relevance to legal issues and implications of telemedicine/teledentistry for the dental practitioner.

Conclusions. Numerous issues require resolution before telemedicine and teledentistry will truly realize their enormous potential to increase access to health care while decreasing health care costs. These issues include interstate licensure, jurisdiction and malpractice, as well as technological, security and ethical questions.

Practice Implications. Telemedicine and teledentistry are relatively new to the dental field. Many of the legal issues reviewed have yet to be resolved by the legislature or the courts. Furthermore, technology has not yet progressed to the point where the practitioner can be certain that no technological failure will occur during a teledental consultation. In spite of these problems, the potential of telemedicine and teledentistry is tremendous. Improvement in accessibility of health care and lowered health care costs are only two of the many advantages that will emerge as telemedicine and teledentistry become integrated with, and fundamentally change, the practice of medicine and dentistry.







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