Submitted by Furlabun t3_10pcfgo in pittsburgh
UPDATE: Feb 6 2023.
Greetings yinz
I just want to put this here in care anyone needs it and is in a similair spot to me: no care credit, stuck with insurance, making too much to get sliding scale but living paycheck to oaycheck. You are worth the effort to live, and that means taking care of ur teeth.
I ended up going to Dr. Julia Dentice's practice at the rec of a friend. My dentist was Dr. Rumbaugh.
There's not a lot of info online but the whole practice is a hidden gem. They have their own in house payment plan. Together with my Cigna 5000/250 insurance I have a way forward that is in what i can do. The entire time I was treated like a real person and not a wallet and she was ready and willing to do everything on my teeth without even discussing money in depth. She answered all my questions, was patient with my anxiety and teeth in need of serious work. I'm two appointments in and I finally feel like I have a way out of the muck.
She encouraged me to keep my teeth and go for root canal rather than extract the worst of it, for my long term health. When I yold her the thousands I'd been quoted for several root canals at a "chain" dentist, she explained why that wasn't what i needed and that they could save my teeth. With the payment plan, and how kind the entire staff is... I really can't describe how I feel.
Please if you've been putting off dental and you can't get help on a sliding scale and are too anxious to go to the student clinic like me, and can pay but just need more time, patience, etc, please please please get to a dentist. You are worth that effort. I couldn't recommend Dr. Dentice's practice enough. I hope this or even the information others have posted here helps you.
-=-=-
Hey y'all, giving a bit of context- thanks for reading-
I've been in the burgh for 2 years now- I have bad adhd and am suffering the toothy consequences despite trying to get my life in order, lol- So was finally able to get onto dental insurance- Cigna 5000/250- but I learned that on top of the 24 month waiting period, I can only get one major procedure done every 60 months. They don't really put that in your face until after you buy in, and I guess I didn't have enough insurance experience to even think that was a thing. I know I'll have some fillings, some root canals, which means crowns, or extractions and eventually either shelling out for implants or bridges or who knows.
Anyways. Looking for any answers/experience/dentist recommendations from anyone in my shoes- needing major dental work, has (bad?) insurance, possibly if you've used a discount plan. I'm not sure I have the guts to go to the Pitt dental school. I don't think Care Credit will take me, as I have a good credit score but was denied the pre-approval on a guesstimate.
I'm looking at potentially switching to Spirit Dental or the Cigna Dental Discount Savings Plus Plan, but I'm not getting clear answers from dentists when I try to call about if it's accepted. Spirit goes through Ameritas and when I called one dentist about the savings plan, the receptionist said "they might not take it, it just depends, it can be too cheap." And I just don't know if dropping money on something that might work but might not is worth it.
I've tried reaching out to sliding-scale clinics. Northside Christian isn't getting back to me and the one in Southside isn't taking new patients.
If you have any experience, in any of these plans or services or anything, I'd greatly appreciate your input. I am so afraid of dying to an infected tooth that I'm going crazy, haha. Thank you!
Jumpy-Natural4868 t1_j6joms6 wrote
pitt dental student clinic