1/5 Physics Of C. 5 months ago on Google
Amarjot
Dev
examined
my
9
year-old
daughter
and
said
he
wanted
to
give
her
a
silver
amalgam
filling,
which
is
50%
mercury.
I
said
I
didn't
want
mercury
in
her
mouth.
He
argued
with
me
for
approximately
20
minutes
about
how
safe
it
is.
Then
his
assistant
got
angry
with
me
because
I
wouldn't
capitulate,
so
the
dentist
told
her
to
leave
the
room
and
continued
to
argue
with
me
about
dental
mercury
being
safe.
I
don't
know
anything
about
dentistry
other
than
my
own
personal
experience
of
losing
baby
teeth
and
getting
big
teeth
and
what
I
learned
researching
my
own
mercury
fillings
that
I
had
removed.
I
suggested
pulling
the
tooth
because
she
was
at
the
age
where
her
big
teeth
were
coming
in,
and
he
immediately
agreed
and
pulled
the
tooth.
I
had
no
idea
that
dentists
only
pull
baby
teeth
as
a
last
resort,
because
they
hold
space
and
guide
big
teeth
into
place
so
they
don't
become
impacted,
My
daughter
now
has
an
impacted
premolar
that
was
under
the
baby
tooth
he
pulled
and
needs
expensive
Orthodontist
work
to
fix
the
problem,
which
comes
with
its
own
potential
problems,
from
gum
disease
to
root
resorption,
to
the
pain
of
tightening
braces
for
years
to
come
and
then
a
lifetime
of
wearing
a
retainer,
I
discovered
that
the
#1
reason
kids
get
impacted
teeth
is
premature
loss
of
a
baby
tooth,
so
dentists
only
pull
them
as
a
last
resort.
The
dentist
quoted
a
price
for
a
spacer,
but
he
explained
nothing
about
it.
Her
big
teeth
were
coming
fast
and
if
she
needed
it,
why
would
he
pull
the
baby
tooth
in
the
first
place,
considering
it
was
a
natural
spacer
that
I
now
learn
was
guiding
in
the
big
tooth.
This
is
common
knowledge
for
dentists,
but
not
for
parents.
He
did
not
explain
why
or
inform
me
or
even
reference
the
x-ray
to
let
me
know
there
was
no
big
tooth
coming
in
yet.
I
am
not
a
dental
professional
so
I
relied
on
the
dentist
to
properly
inform
me
so
I
could
make
the
best
decision
and
avoid
hurting
my
daughter.
The
dentist
should
not
have
pulled
her
tooth
and
if
a
dentist
pulls
a
baby
tooth,
he/she
should
inform
parents
about
the
repercussions.
Children
can't
make
these
decisions
for
themselves,
so
parents
rely
on
professional
dentists
to
properly
inform
them
to
make
the
right
decision.
I
informed
the
dental
office
about
what
happened,
but
the
dentist
never
bothered
to
call
back
-
Does
integrity
not
matter
to
these
offices
anymore,
when
things
go
south?