Countless dentists each year face formal disciplinary actions from state dental boards. Allegations—even if false—pose genuine risks to your career, reputation, and livelihood. Responding without legal representation increases the likelihood of severe consequences.
Protect your practice. Protect your future. Call Wood & Delgado immediately at (866) 764-8036.
The Role of a Dental Board Defense Lawyer
What They Do
A dental board defense lawyer safeguards your professional license and reputation when allegations surface. The attorney’s responsibilities include:
- Legal Representation: Defending you during state dental board investigations, interviews, and disciplinary hearings.
- Case Evaluation: Analyzing complaints, identifying weaknesses, and constructing a compelling defense strategy.
- Evidence Gathering: Organizing patient records, treatment notes, billing histories, and witness statements to strengthen your defense.
- Negotiation: Discussing resolution options directly with dental board attorneys to reduce penalties or dismiss complaints.
- Hearing Preparation: Coaching you thoroughly for testimony, cross-examination, and interactions with dental board members during formal proceedings.
When to Seek Their Help
Timely intervention by your attorney improves your defense significantly. Consult a lawyer:
- Upon Notification: Immediately after receiving notice from your state dental board regarding a complaint.
- Before Responding: Before submitting written statements or answering investigative questions.
- During Investigations: Anytime during ongoing investigations or after receiving additional inquiries from the board.
- Facing Disciplinary Action: As soon as the dental board proposes disciplinary measures or sanctions.
Common Allegations Leading to Dental Board Investigations
While allegations vary, certain issues regularly trigger dental board complaints.
Clinical Concerns
Clinical complaints directly relate to patient care quality and treatment practices:
- Substandard Care: Accusations of procedures or treatments falling below accepted dental standards, violating guidelines like those established under California Business and Professions Code §1680.
- Misdiagnosis: Incorrect diagnoses leading to delayed or inappropriate dental treatment.
- Treatment Errors: Performing unnecessary or incorrect procedures, potentially harming patients.
Ethical and Professional Issues
Dental board complaints frequently target a dentist's professional ethics or personal conduct:
- Patient Abuse: Allegations of inappropriate, unethical, or abusive behavior towards patients.
- Fraudulent Billing: Intentional submission of inaccurate billing claims to insurance providers or federal healthcare programs—potentially violating federal laws such as 18 U.S.C. §1347 (Healthcare Fraud).
- Substance Abuse: Practicing dentistry while impaired by alcohol, prescription medications, or illicit substances.
- Criminal Convictions: Convictions for criminal acts that indicate unprofessional conduct, impacting professional licensure eligibility under laws such as New York Education Law §6509.