Digital dentistry has evolved from a niche innovation into a foundational part of modern clinical practice. In a recent webinar hosted by Trusted Dental Technologies, Dr. Clint Stevens, DDS, FAGD, FICOI of Downtown Tulsa Dental shared real-world insights into how digital tools are transforming efficiency, diagnostics, and profitability in everyday dentistry.
This article breaks down the key takeaways—and what they mean for your practice.
Click below to watch full webinar.
Dr. Stevens didn’t adopt digital dentistry for the sake of technology—he did it to deliver better patient care.
Early in his career, he sought more predictable, efficient, and conservative treatment options, especially for common cases like fractured teeth. Traditional workflows often made these treatments cumbersome, particularly when multiple visits were required.
Digital workflows—especially chairside CAD/CAM—changed that.
Digital dentistry enables clinicians to deliver the care they want to provide in a more efficient and predictable way.
Regardless of specialty or clinical preference, the decision to go digital centers around a few universal priorities:
These values apply to both clinical outcomes and business performance—and digital technology supports all of them.
Digital dentistry is no longer just a replacement for analog tools. According to Dr. Stevens, three major shifts have made it essential:
Even if your practice is still analog, your lab isn’t.
Bottom line: You’re already in a digital ecosystem—whether you realize it or not.
Modern tools like CBCT and intraoral scanners provide significantly more diagnostic insight.
Dr. Stevens shared that improved diagnostics frequently lead to different—and better—treatment decisions, reducing complications.
Today’s digital ecosystem connects everything:
This integration allows clinicians to:
One of the most compelling arguments for digital adoption is the inefficiency of traditional impressions:
Digital scanning eliminates many of these issues while improving both accuracy and patient comfort.
Digital dentistry isn’t just clinically superior—it’s financially strategic.
Dr. Stevens emphasizes that reducing visits—not cutting material costs—is the biggest driver of profitability.
The real financial impact comes from eliminating second visits and increasing production capacity.
Patients today expect convenience and speed:
As Dr. Stevens notes:
“The only thing a patient dislikes more than seeing me once is seeing me twice.”
With so many options on the market, where should you start?
The biggest message from the webinar is simple:
Digital dentistry is no longer a competitive advantage—it’s a requirement.
Not going digital will ultimately cost more—in efficiency, in outcomes, and in competitiveness.
Whether you’re just starting with intraoral scanning or building a full digital workflow, the key is to align your technology with your clinical goals and practice model.
Digital dentistry isn’t about buying more tools—it’s about building a smarter, more connected way to deliver care.