Marketing Teeth Whitening The Market Of Dentistry Term Paper

PAGES
1
WORDS
351
Cite

Marketing

Teeth Whitening

The market of dentistry might initially seem to be a predominantly health-driven market, rather than one driven by consumer hopes and fears regarding their status and sexual appeal. However, the recent advertisements for teeth whitening devices call into question the healthy, medical image of the commercial toothpaste market. Crest White Strips, for example, stresses the seductiveness of the individuals at the forefront of its advertising. The desired consumer behavior it draws upon is the motivation of improving one's appearance for purely cosmetic and cosmological reasons. In a product line that traditionally used to push products based on the fact that one out of every ten dentists preferred a particular brand of paste, now the fact that a white and healthy smile, a smile that creates the appearance of health rather than a mouth that actually is healthy causes in the teeth whitener market the impression that the marketers are pressing the consumer to buy based on the motivation of reactivating a social life based upon a youthful appearance, rather than reduced gum disease.

Tooth whiteners, however, because they can be performed in dental offices, have a certain ethical questionability to them -- they do not improve mouth health, but suggest that they might, given the medical marketing that still surrounds the art of dentistry. They can be expensive, running anywhere from thirty to six hundred dollars. Moreover, the ease and comfort of the procedure is stressed, such as with Crest Night Strips, which are applied overnight to the teeth, as opposed to the often uncomfortable but far more necessary work needed to keep teeth in order, through work at a dentist's office. None of the marketing positions itself as a replacement to good dental care, but there is a certain implication in some of the advertising surrounding these increasingly popular cosmetic devices that are not even particularly effective -- "while you may not get the pearly white smile of a Bride's Magazine model, you're likely to get a slightly brighter smile." (ABC, 2004)

Works Cited

ABC.com. (2004) "Teeth Whiteners. http://abclocal.go.com/kabc/features/112403_fs_teeth_whiteners.html

Cite this Document:

"Marketing Teeth Whitening The Market Of Dentistry" (2004, October 21) Retrieved April 18, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/marketing-teeth-whitening-the-market-of-177491

"Marketing Teeth Whitening The Market Of Dentistry" 21 October 2004. Web.18 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/marketing-teeth-whitening-the-market-of-177491>

"Marketing Teeth Whitening The Market Of Dentistry", 21 October 2004, Accessed.18 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/marketing-teeth-whitening-the-market-of-177491

Related Documents
Dentistry As a Profession
PAGES 2 WORDS 580

Dentistry as a Profession There was a time when the profession of dentistry solely focused on treating and alleviating pain coming from any oral tissues. The dentists were considered as healers just like medical doctors. But a recent trend towards broadening the horizons of dentistry has lead it to step into the fields of cosmetic medicine. Focus has been provided on dentists as smile constructors. Dental clinics have been transformed into

Dentistry Stem cells have received a great deal of attention over the past ten years or so. Initially they were in the news because of the great promise they held because of the possibility that stem cells could cure diseases like Parkinson's, heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimer's and other medical problems. Then stem cells were in the news because President George W. Bush issued an executive order banning the use of federal

Although it may have the danger of making some patients complacent about other risk factors if their mouth is not found to be problematic, and some dentists may resent outsourcing the test to school nurses, for high risk, particularly poor children, it could be potentially life-saving for their teeth and later well-being, provided the information is disseminated to them in an appropriate fashion. All of these technologies hold the

Ricardo exposed me to several facets of the private practice including monitoring patient files and managing front-end duties including reception for new clients. I learned how the professional may attract new clients and retain existing ones to ensure the success of the practice. Moreover, I assisted with intake and with rear office duties as well, including but not limited to instrument care and radiology assistance. Although I worked full-time at

However, there are still concerns about product safety. According to the product information from one of the sealant's own informational websites, in an article entitled "Resin Dental Sealants and Bisphenol a Oral Exposure," in 1996 concerns about the safety of dental sealants were raised by researchers University of Granada in Spain when they discovered detectable levels of bisphenol a (BPA) in the saliva of patients treated with dental sealants, although

Signs and symptoms of periodontal disease include bleeding on probing, the presence of periodontal pockets, alveolar bone loss, pain, and gingival swelling. Risk factors for periodontal disease include cigarette smoking, diabetes, stress, poor oral hygiene, the presence of periodontal pockets, and heredity. Because the signs and symptoms of periodontal disease are not equal to the risk factors for periodontal disease, the method to determine a diagnosis of periodontal disease