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Dental Career: Dental Laboratory Technician

  • Writer: elly
    elly
  • Sep 12, 2019
  • 2 min read

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When you go to the dentist, you will see people working at the front desk, cleaning experts who clean your teeth, and most likely dentists too. The person you will not meet, in many cases, is a dental laboratory technician. But these technicians are very important for successful dental practice. If a career that combines dentistry and sculpture seems interesting to you, then the work of a dental laboratory technician might be perfect.


Dental laboratory technicians perform one main function for the dentist's office: they take dental prints that the dentist gets from patients and use them to make accurate dental models from wax. These dentures can then be used as a reference to build nissui idonesia dentures, or to make dental structures such as bridges and crowns, which will then be secured by the dentist to the patient's mouth. Some technicians work behind the dentist's office, while others work in large laboratories and are contracted to do work for various dentists in certain areas.


To become a dental laboratory technician, you must have high-level sculpting skills. You also have to be a patient individual. Sometimes dentists will refuse the work of a dental laboratory technician several times before they get a model they like, and some technicians feel that some dentists reject the work arbitrarily. You cannot be frustrated. Because it's your job to serve the dentist, all you can do is try to live up to his expectations as precisely as possible. Dental lab technicians also work alone for long periods of time, so you can't be delayed by yourself. In fact, there are rarely technicians who have made contact with patients, except when they have to physically measure a person's teeth for a reason.


What's interesting about this career is that you don't have to go to school for it. Having an associate's degree or even a bachelor's degree in a field related to science, anatomy, or dentistry might give you an edge when you apply for a job, but that's not necessary. Many dental laboratory technicians learn everything they need to know correctly at work.


Labs often place new technicians through their own informal training programs, who teach them what materials are needed to make dental sculptures, and how to rebuild and reshape molds. Sometimes the lab will regard the technician as a trainee for several years before he is allowed to make his own dental sculpture. Until then, new technicians will always be under the supervision of veteran employees, and will assist the lab with administrative and maintenance tasks. However, there are courses and programs in laboratory practicum that can be taken by someone in many colleges and communities, so that he will be ready to serve as a full-time technician on the first day of work.

 
 
 

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