Enter a Filipino housekeeper, nicknamed “Babe”. “She worked for us and had beautiful teeth- done in the Philippines. So I surfed the net and decided to go to Bangkok, a place where I had been on holiday before,” says Matthews. The toothy tour cost about $7000 all up and Matthews believes it saved her $13,000 on Australian dental bills.
The trip effectively crammed two year’s of dental work into two weeks as the American-trained staff successfully mastered “two full crowns, a bridge, a nasty extraction, front veneers, eight fillings, treatment for gum disease and the replacement of 15 old amalgam fillings with new white composites”
The final laser-whitening step was accompanied by a half-hour-long soothing foot massage.
“I came back with the biggest recommendation,” says Matthews, whose big reveal at Kalgoorlie airport in December 2005 led to “lots of double takes” from her partner John.
“I think I sold the trip to half a dozen regulars at the motel,” she says with a laugh. “They said ‘Oh gee, I might have that done my self in the future’.”
Of course, Matthews is not alone in her pursuit of pearly white perfection while on an overseas holiday in Asia. She join thousands around the world now making the pilgrimage in search of bargain-basement dental deals, seduced by the noting of getting a bit of work done at a fraction of the cost back home.
Bangkok smile dental clinic is the very popular destination for Australians. This clinic runs by Dr. Sermsakul Wongtiraporn or, as he’s now better known,
Dr.Sermsakul studied for his degree and graduate diploma in Bangkok before picking up his diploma in dental implants from the University of California, Los Angeles.
Dental veneers which normally cost $1000 are just $330, $4000 implants go for about $1350, crowns come in at $350 instead of $1000, and fillings mere $30 instead of $100
“Dental tourism is so needed because Australian prices are far too high,” one client says. “As a result, people can’t afford to have their teeth fixed.
On the streets of Bangkok, 51-year-old real estate agent Joan O’Neill, from Queensland’s Sunshine Coast, is getting a first-hand feel around the Thai streets as she awaits her turn in Dr Bob’s dentist chair.
The fact the Australia is in the grip of a major dental dilemma is also a hot topic. The nation is now rated second-worst among OECD countries for adult decay and there is a chronic shortage of dentists nationally. A grim prediction shows we could still be down 1500 dentists in another four years.
AFTER SIX HOURS IN THE DENTIST’S CHAIR , Patricia Penny is in a coffee shop munching on a ham and cheese waffle “with a full mouth of teeth”. It’s a great sensation, she says. Allan’s also feeling better.
Patricia’s had two bridges and a set of crowns fitted today in addition to a trickier bridge put on earlier in the week. She’s had her teeth whitened — and the foot massage — and her veneers of 16 years removed. Four new front ones will go on next week. The bill, which includes X-rays, came to AU$10O
Another session at the clinic discussing options convinced the Pennys to research implants further. Allan will get his fillings done, however, for about AU$30 each. "At the end of the day, I’ve got a foil mouth of teeth in a matter of hours,” she adds, tucking into an ice-cream sundae but putting aside the nuts. “It’s all over, that’s the amazing part. And I never felt they were rushing, or pushing. It was just like the dentists at home, really.”
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