Downtown Fun. If You Don’t Believe Us, Come See! Photos courtesy of Louisville Convention & Visitors Bureau

The 201 6 Meeting Preliminary Program Guide March 3-6, 2016 2 P r e s i d e n t i a l G r e e t i n g s

Welcome to a Year in Transition

On behalf of the Kentucky Dental Association Executive Board, the KDA Council on Annual Session and the staff of the Kentucky Dental Association, welcome to the 2016 KDA Annual Meeting, Thursday, March 3 - Sunday, March 6!!

Partly due to circumstances which will necessitate a physical move of the meeting in 2017 and partly in response to feedback received from KDA members, exhibitors and speakers, the 2016 KDA Annual Meeting may have a slightly different feel and increased energy level than what we have experienced in recent years.

Dr. Mary Oldfield, as Scientific Session Chairperson, has worked very hard to tailor a lineup of continuing education courses that you, the membership, has asked to be highlighted at our annual meeting. There will be more CE offerings on and around the exhibit floor space, allowing better accommodation of dentists, hygienists, assistants and administrative staff members to “do both” (courses and exhibit space) more conveniently.

There will be an “Opening Session” at the 2016 Meeting to help set the tone for member involvement and dentist-to-dentist interaction in an effort to “bring the profession together again” as we all work together for the overall common good of dentistry. The Marcus Randall Dinner will be changed to the Marcus Randall Luncheon in 2016.

A party has been planned for Friday night, similar to a modern-day “Prom night”, complete with food, beverage and music/entertainment. Dental students, new dentists and matured dentists (of all ages!!) will hopefully come together to celebrate our profession and to rekindle relationships and start new friendships aimed at strengthening the dental profession from within our ranks!!

Make plans to meet with your dental colleagues, bring your staff, family and friends and join us March 3-6, 2016 at the Kentucky Dental Association Annual Meeting!!!!

Dennis R. Price, DMD President Kentucky Dental Association

3 G e n e r a l I n f o r m a t i o n On-Site Registration Ticketing Policy Located in the main lobby of the Kentucky International Convention Center, All attendees who pre-register for the 2016 meeting will have their badge and/ the registration desk is conveniently open during the following hours: or tickets mailed in advance of the meeting. You do not have to purchase tickets in order to pre-register for the meeting. All tickets and badges will be mailed to Friday, March 4, 2016 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. the address indicated on the order form. Please note that plastic badge Saturday, March 5, 2016 7:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. holders will not be mailed and will be conveniently located on-site. Sunday, March 6, 2016 No Registration Completed forms must be postmarked by February 19, 2016. There will be no registration on Sunday, March 6th. Tickets may be purchased by MasterCard, Visa, check or money order. Fees will be Please note that all continuing education courses scheduled for Sunday will assessed, up to the maximum allowed by law, for checks not honored by the bank. be held in the Hyatt Hotel. Tickets will be sold at the door for Sunday Tickets will be sold at the meeting depending on availability. There will be a $10 per courses, based on availability. ticket increase if purchased at the door. As a member benefit, registration is free of charge to KDA members.

Registration is also free to the following groups: Ticket payment will not be refunded after - American Dental Association members 5:00 p.m. (EST) Tuesday, March 1, 2016 (Proof of ADA membership is required upon registration) - Spouses who are not dentists - Auxiliary members of the following groups: Please note that the KDA will not replace lost tickets! • Kentucky Dental Hygienists Association • Kentucky Dental Assistants Association • Kentucky Dental Laboratory Association • Auxiliary members who are employed by a member of the ADA CE Credits Continuing education courses provided by the Kentucky Dental Associa- Non-Members Can Attend for Only $199.00! tion are recognized by the Kentucky Board of Dentistry and most other Non-Members can register for the 2016 Kentucky Meeting for $199.00. With state licensing bodies. Continuing education requirements differ from this fee, attendees will receive one complimentary ticket to any ONE HOUR state to state. Check with your state for specific requirements. Continu- continuing education course presented in the exhibit hall on Friday, March 4th. ing education credit hours are shown on each synopsis. This fee also allows entry into the exhibit hall. Board of Dentistry: Continuing education credit hours are earned by attending courses presented at the meeting. Each course synopsis and course ticket lists the hours earned for attending. Members will be provided with a ticket allowing entry to each course, as well as proof KDA Exhibit Hall of attendance. The course ID # given at the end of the course must be Free of charge to all Kentucky meeting registrants, the KDA exhibit recorded on the ticket for it to be valid for CE credit. hall features many exhibitors showcasing product lines and services. Take advantage of an opportune time to discover the newest dental Note: It is the attendees’ responsibility to maintain equipment and supplies, with exhibitors on site to answer your questions. these cards for their records.

Exhibit Hall Hours Academy of General Dentistry: The Kentucky Dental Association is designated as an Approved Friday, March 4, 2016 PACE Program Provider by the Academy of General 9:00 a.m. – 6:30 p.m. Dentistry. The formal continuing education programs Saturday, March 5, 2016 of this program provider are accepted by AGD for 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Fellowship, Mastership and membership maintenance credit. Approval does not imply acceptance by a state or provincial board Closed Sunday of dentistry. The current term of approval extends from 1/1/2014 to Support Our Exhibitors 12/31/2016. Our exhibitors invest extensive resources to attend our meeting. We ask that an extra effort be made to purchase needed supplies and See page 12 of this publication for additional CE services from them at the meeting! information from the Kentucky Board of Dentistry.

4 G e n e r a l I n f o r m a t i o n William Marcus Randall Calling All KDA Members Memorial Luncheon & Is there a speaker on our program that you’ve wanted to meet? We are looking Awards Presentation for those members interested in meeting, greeting and introducing the wonderful Thursday, March 3, 2016 speakers we have on our program. 11:30 A.M. OPEN to EVERYONE! We offer any paid course at no Tickets: $40.00 charge for the person who intro- duces the speaker for that course. The 50 Year Club Awards, Presidential Citation Awards and Some exceptions may apply. Call Fellowship Awards will be presented during this luncheon. for details.

Duties include arriving early to the course to hand out information to the attendees. Once the course is ready KDA Office Closing to begin, intro- The KDA Executive Office will close duce the at the end of business on Tuesday, speaker. March 1, 2016 and will reopen on During the Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 9:00 a.m. presentation, be available to attend to the needs of the speaker should any arise and enjoy the course. At the end, provide the course code numbers for the attendees to ob- CE Course Handouts tain CE credit and collect the CE cards. These cards are then returned to the Going Paperless appropriate location in the convention center. In an effort to minimize paper waste and benefit the environment, course hand- outs will be made available on the KDA’s website at http://www.kyda. Call the KDA office as soon as possible org/the-kentucky-meeting.html to get the speaker of your choice!

Please note that some speakers have chosen not to provide handouts. These materials are not printed for distribution on-site. If you wish to have these Alumni Receptions materials to reference during the course, please bring a printed copy with you. The University of Louisville and the University of Kentucky will be hosting alumni receptions on Friday, March 4th at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Louisville. This is a perfect time to Badge Holders catch up with fellow classmates. University of Louisville Please note that plastic badge holders will not be mailed 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. with pre-registration materials.

For your convenience, plastic badge holders will be available in the University of Kentucky registration area during registration hours. 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.

5 N E W S T U F F F O R Y O U T h i s Y e a r !

Non-Members Can President’s Reception & Attend for only $199! Friday Night Homecoming Non-Members can register for the 2016 Kentucky Meeting for $199.00. Event for Students and With this fee, attendees will receive one complimentary ticket to any ONE HOUR continuing education course presented in the exhibit hall on New Graduates Friday, March 4th. This fee also allows entry into the exhibit hall. This first-ever event is a celebration designed especially for students and new dentists to welcome them to the profession and organized dentistry. Begin- ning at 7 p.m., dance the night KDA Thursday away with a DJ! While you are resting from all that dancing, be Leadership Session totally entertained by Mr. Magic Dave, our resident magician for (Members Only) the evening! And don’t forget to Kentucky dentists will face many difficult challenges in the next few get your years. This presentation is a hands-on opportunity for you to assess picture your strengths in key leadership competencies and provide you with taken with your BFF before you leave. It’s information you need to lead. Increase your personal a great opportunity to spend time with potential to affect change through a better under- friends, meet new ones, and find your standing of the opportunities to exhibit courageous home in organized dentistry through the leadership. KDA. You won’t want to miss the fun!

KDA members have expressed interest in receiving Then at 9:30 p.m., join our “Off Site After Party” and mingle more professional development opportunities from with your friends! Be looking for more information about these the KDA. Your feedback from this session will provide two events in future KDA emails! additional support of our upcoming KDA Leadership 7:00 P.M. – 9:00 P.M. Academy. Hyatt Hotel - Regency Ballroom South CE – 2.5 hours FREE to New Dentists and Dental Students Sponsored by P&G/Crest Oral B (New Dentists are those out of dental school 10 years or less)

$35.00 KDA Members/Exhibitors - Price includes one drink ticket Thursday Opening Session $50.00 Non-Members Welcome to the (new and improved) KDA Annual Meeting! Please come to our first-ever opening session, intended to set the tone for our New Dentist Social convening of organized dentistry in and around the commonwealth. This brief, but important, session will be an opportunity to: After Party • Outline new features of our “Kentucky Class” annual meeting 9:30 P.M. – ??? • Recognize officers and special guests Offsite • Summarize our achievements and outline our public policy agenda Watch your email and Facebook for details! • Understand the value of membership and the Power of Three Later on Friday night, after the ULSD and UKCD Alumni Receptions and the Homecoming Event/President’s Reception, the New Dentist Welcome Students! Committee will host a fun social event for new dentists, which are den- tists who have been out of school for ten years or less. All Fourth Year We are doing our best to make our meeting more student-friendly! Again Dental Students are invited to attend. It will be necessary to RSVP. this year, students will have their own badge classification, which will allow More details will be given in your school at a later date. In past years, students access to our exhibit hall! All students are invited to attend our this has been a very well-attended activity, so make time to attend! first-ever Homecoming Event for students and new graduates! Read above The fun will begin at 10:30 p.m. and last until??? Watch your email and to see what all we have planned. Don’t miss all the fun! It’s FREE! Facebook for details! 6 N E W S T U F F F O R Y O U T h i s Y e a r !

KDA Friday Breakout Continuing Education Sessions (Members Only) in the Exhibit Hall This first-ever offering on topics important to organized dentistry, led The following courses will be presented in the Exhibit Hall. Seating is by KDA board members, will offer quick and current updates to KDA limited for these courses, so don’t miss out! members regarding the following topics. Friday, March 4 KDA Legislative Agenda & Workshop 9:00 A.M. – 10:00 A.M. Component Workshop/Panel Dr. William J. Moorhead Medicaid Update “Digital Dental Product Review” Multi-Dentist Practice Panel Sponsored by WEAVE & Sikka Software

Courses are repeated in the afternoon... 10:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. Mr. Craig Pickett Friday Morning, March 4 “Gypsum and Model Work for Dental Professionals” Sponsored by Whip Mix 8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session Legislative Agenda & Workshop Noon – 1:00 P.M. Sign up for Key Contacts Dr. Mark Murphy “Treating OSA in Your Practice” 8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory Component Workshop/Panel Share Experiences & Learn Best Practices 1:30 P.M. – 3:30 P.M. MaryAnn Gately 8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session “The Digital Restoration Revolution” Medicaid Update Sponsored by Henry Schein and Planmeca USA

8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session 4:30 P.M. – 6:30 P.M. Multi-Dentist Practice Panel Dr. Jeremy Bewley & Dr. Brad Harmon Share Experiences & Learn Best Practices “Live Immediate Crown Placement” Sponsored by Ivoclar Vivadent, KYCADCAM, Sirona and Friday Afternoon, March 4 Patterson Dental Corporation

4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session Saturday, March 5 Legislative Agenda & Workshop Sign up for Key Contacts 9:00 A.M. – 10:00 A.M. Dr. Katherine King 4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session “Tips for Improved Success on the Board Licensure Component Workshop/Panel Examinations” Share Experiences & Learn Best Practices 10:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. 4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session David Beyer “New Board Rules for Continuing Education Gathering Medicaid Update and Other Tidbits of Information”

4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session Noon – 1:00 P.M. Multi-Dentist Practice Panel Dr. Geoffrey Ball Share Experiences & Learn Best Practices “The Civilian Dentist’s Role in America’s Defense”

7 50-plus Fun Things to Do and See in Louisville!

is o e... th nly s ac ..& crat rf . ch e s the su

Louisville Favorites!

4 Churchill Downs and the Kentucky Derby Museum 4 The Muhammad Ali Center - museum and cultural center and exhibits 4 Louisville Urban Bourbon Trail 4 The Kentucky Science Center (previously the Louisville Science Center) 4 Bernheim Arboretum th i&s Research only sForest ...& cra 4 Walking Tours of Old Louisville, which is thomech to one of the largest es e... historic preservation districts in the nation and the country’s the greatestsurfa c collection of preserved Victorian architecture. Stroll St. James Court and Belgravia Court for starters. 4 The Louisville Zoo

Family Fun!

4 Big Four Walking Bridge 4 Louisville Mega Cavern & Mega Zips All Underground Ziplines & Adventure Tour 4 Open range Indoor Paintball and Gun Range 4 Bluegrass Indoor Karting 4 Renaissance Fun Park 4 Sightseeing Tours 4 Sky Zone Indoor Trampoline Park 8 Historic Fun!

4 Louisville Slugger Museum and Factory 4 Falls of the Ohio National Wildlife Conservation Area 4 Blackacre Nature Preserve and Historic Homestead 4 Cave Hill Cemetery 4 Zachary Taylor National Cemetery 4 Thomas Edison House 4 Locust Grove 4 Farmington 4 Conrad-Caldwell House Museum 4 Waverly Hills Sanatorium 4 The Historic Louisville Water Tower Park on Zorn Avenue

The Arts & Entertainment!

4 The Kentucky Center for the Performing Arts 4 The KentuckyShow! at the Kentucky Science Center 4 Frazier History Museum 4 The Speed Art Museum is currently closed for major renovations, but Local Speed serves as the Museum’s satellite space during the renovation and expansion, hosting unique programming, special exhibitions, family art activities and events. 4 Louisville Orchestra 4 Louisville Ballet 4 Louisville Glassworks Art Museum and Workshop 4 21c Museum 4 Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft 4 Actors Theatre of Louisville 4 Mercury Ballroom 9 Shopping in & around Louisville!

Some Louisville Sweet Spots

Blue Dog Bakery & Café Cake Flour Cellar Door Chocolates Comfy Cow Dundee Candy Shop Shopping in & around Louisville! Fudgery Graeter’s 4 Shopping in NuLu’s Eat market District: http://nulu.org/ Heitzman Traditional Bakery & Deli 4 Mall St. Matthews is home to more than 140 specialty retailers including Arhaus, Ann Taylor Loft, Brooks Homemade Ice Cream & Pie Brothers, J. Jill, Pottery Barn & Williams-Sonoma. http://www.mallstmatthews.com/ Kitchen 4 is a beautifully renovated shopping destination with favorites like Macy’s, Von Maur, Muth’s Candy Sears and Dick’s Sporting Goods as well as 110 specialty stores. http://www.oxmoorcenter.com/ Nord’s Bakery 4 The Outlet Shoppes of the Bluegrass in Simpsonville opened in September 2015 and is the talk of the Plehn’s Bakery town in Kentucky. With a 30 minute drive from Louisville, the Outlet Shoppes offers everyone their time for Sweet Surrender Dessert Cafe a shopping spree to remember. http://www.theoutletshoppesofthebluegrass.com/ 4 Paddock Shops Lifestyle Center, setting the pace, for shopping and dining in Louisville. A pedestrian- friendly, family environment with events, restaurants and stores. For more Information visit http://www. paddockshops.com/ 4 Westport Village features local shops, restaurants and businesses catering to a wide array of interests and passions. Our exclusive and conveniently close center offers refined tastes different than any other place. Come visit us and experience Louisville’s Southern charm. http://www.westportvillage.com/

Louisville Dining, Nightlife and more Shopping!

4 Fourth Street Live! http://www.4thstlive.com/ 4 Frankfort Avenue Corridor http://www.frankfortave.com/ 4 Bardstown Road Corridor/ The Highlands of Louisville http://thehighlandsoflouisville.com/Shopping.php 4 Butchertown/Cliffton neighborhood

10 Some Popular Louisville Eateries Helpful Websites!

If You REALLY need more ideas or more information about the 211 Clover Lane 610 Magnolia places we have listed, go to these websites: Against the Grain Brewery & Smokehouse 4 http://www.tripadvisor.com/Attractions-g39604-Activi- Asiatique Restaurant ties-Louisville_Kentucky.html#TtD Jeff Ruby’s Steakhouse August Moon Chinese Bistro 4 http://www.gotolouisville.com/index.aspx LeMoo Bistro 1860 Wine Bar 4 https://www.louisville.com/ Lilly’s Bistro Le Relais 4 http://louisvilleky.gov/ Marketplace Restaurant Blackstone Grille 4 Manny & Merle http://wikitravel.org/en/Louisville BLU Italian Mediterranean Grille Martini Italian Bistro 4 http://louisville-downtown.squarespace.com/maps/ Bourbons Bistro Mayan Cafe Bourbon Raw MESH Brasserie Provence Mike Linnig’s Bistro 301 Milkwood Bristol Bar & Grille Mitchell’s Fish Market Buck’s Mojito Tapas Restaurant Café Lou Lou Molly Malone’s Irish Pub & Restaurant Cafe Magnolia Monkey Wrench Café Mimosa Morton’s, The Steakhouse Captain’s Quarters Mussel & Burger Bar Clifton’s Pizza Napa River Grill Coals Artisan Pizza North End Cafe Corbett’s: an American place Old Seelbach Bar Old Spaghetti Factory Old Stone Inn Pat’s Steakhouse Porcini Proof on Main at 21 C Hotel Ramsi’s Cafe on the World Louisville Antiques and Fun Shops! Rivue Ruth’s Chris Steak House Rye 4 Derby City Antique Mall - http://www.derbycityantiquemall.com/ Selena’s at Willow Lake Tavern 4 Joe Ley Antiques - http://www.joeley.com/ Seviche - A Latin Restaurant 4 Architectural Salvage - http://architecturalsalvage.com/home.asp Shiraz Silver Dollar 4 Red Tree Furniture - http://redtreefurniture.com/home.html St. Charles Exchange 4 eyedia - is a unique consignment store located in the Butcher- Stoney River Legendary Steaks town/Cliffton neighborhood featuring over 7,500 square feet of Sway The Oakroom extraordinary home furnishings in room-like settings along with Toast On Market accessories, gifts and one of the best selections of new lamps and Troll Pub Under the Bridge mirrors in the area. http://eyediashop.com/ Uptown Cafe Decca Varanese 4 Elizabeth’s Timeless Attire - Vintage Clothing from 1860-1970 - Doc Crow’s Village Anchor http://elizabethstimelessattire.com/ Down One Bourbon Bar Vincenzo’s Italian Eddie Merlot’s 4 The Nitty Gritty Vintage Clothing and Costume Rental - http:// Vint Eiderdown Volare Ristorante nittygrittyvintage.com/ El Camino Wagner’s Pharmacy El Mundo Wiltshire On Market English Grill Z’s Oyster Bar & Steakhouse Equus Guaca-Mole For more complete lists of restaurants, Harvest click on these links: Havana Rumba Howl at the Moon 4 http://www.gotolouisville.com/eat/ Impellizzeri’s Pizza member-results/index.aspx Irish Rover 4 https://www.zomato.com/louisville Jack Fry’s 11 G e n e r a l I n f o r m a t i o n From the Kentucky Board of Dentistry Website Regarding Continuing Education... Required CE for Dentists Only Faculty of a dental or dental hygiene school, college, or program do not receive continuing As a result of HB1, ALL licensed dentists in Kentucky must have completed 3 hours of education credit for their teaching hours. continuing education that relates to the use of the electronic monitoring system, pain management or addiction disorders PRIOR to renewing their license on December 31st Duplicate credit cannot be claimed for the same course in a renewal biennium with of each renewal cycle. (Dentists renew on odd numbered years.). The hours are to be the exception of a bloodborne pathogens course taken to meet annual Federal OSHA requirements. included in the 30 required hours and are NOT additional. Documentation CPR Certification Requirement It is the sole responsibility of each licensee to obtain a certificate verifying participation in All Kentucky licensees are required to provide proof of having current certification in continuing education courses and activities. cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) that meets or exceeds the guidelines set forth by the American Heart Association. This certification requirement is in addition to the Continuing Certificates must contain the following information: Education requirements. • The signature of or verification by the provider • The name of the licensee in attendance Kentucky Required Continuing Education • The title of the course or meeting attended or completed Effective July 15, 2010, the regulations detailing continuing education requirements have • The date of attendance or completion changed. The Board encourages you to review continuing education already taken to make • The number of hours earned (based on clock hours of attendance) sure it meets the requirements of the new regulations. • Evidence of the method of delivery if the course was taken in a live interactive presentation format. All dentists and dental hygienists are required to obtain 30 hours of continuing education, Licensees must keep this documentation for a minimum of five (5) years. Each licensee is based on clock hours of attendance, every two years. These courses must relate to or subject to audit of proof of CE compliance by the Board. advance the practice of dentistry or dental hygiene and be useful to the licensee’s practice of dentistry or dental hygiene. A minimum of ten (10) hours must be taken in a live interactive Exemption Requests presentation format. A licensee may submit a written request for a hardship waiver to the Board if he or she feels that meeting the continuing education requirements would be an undue burden. The These hours must meet the requirements outlined in 201 KAR 8:532 for dentists and 201 waiver request should be received in the Board office prior to last Board Meeting of the KAR 8:562 for dental hygienists. renewal year, which is the second Saturday in November (November 12, 2011 for dentists; Course Content November 10, 2012 for hygienists). There is no limit on the number of hours which can be obtained by courses, including content designed to increase: If the Board approves your request for a hardship waiver, it must be kept along with continuing education documentation. • Competency in treating patients who are medically-compromised or who experience medical emergencies during the course of dental treatment FAQ • Knowledge of pharmaceutical products and the protocol of the proper use of medications Q. May a dentist use the education hours obtained to apply for an initial sedation permit • Competence to diagnose oral pathology (for dentists only) toward the regular 30 hour continuing education requirement? What about the hours • Awareness of currently accepted methods of infection control obtained as required for the renewal of a sedation permit? • Knowledge of basic medical and scientific subjects including, but not limited to, biology, At the November 12, 2011 Board Meeting, the Kentucky Board of Dentistry resolved that licensees physiology, pathology, biochemistry, pharmacology, epidemiology and public health may apply the DIFFERENCE only in C.E. hours used to meet anesthesia renewal and/or application • Knowledge of clinical and technological subjects including, but not limited to, clinical requirements toward the regular 30 hours of continuing education required for license renewal. techniques and procedures, materials and equipment Other than the DIFFERENCE in hours only, the education requirements in 201 KAR 8:550 shall not • Knowledge of subjects pertinent to patient management, safety, and oral healthcare be used to satisfy other continuing education requirements and shall be in addition to the 30 hours • Competency in assisting in mass casualty or mass immunization situations of continuing education required under 201 KAR 8:532.

A maximum of ten (10) hours total may be taken which contain Q. Is there any restriction against a hygienist using the certification courses such as training the following content: for IV line placement; laser use; medical emergencies courses for purposes of General • Increase of clinical skills through the volunteer of clinical charitable dentistry which meets Supervision Privileges; local anesthesia or nitrous oxide analgesia training to apply toward the requirements of KRS 313.254. the 30 hour C.E. requirement under 201 KAR 8:562 Section 5? • Increase knowledge of office business operations and best practices There is no prohibition under current law against applying any of the above Board-approved • Participation in dental or dental hygiene association or society business meetings certification courses toward the 30 hour continuing education requirement.

12 Table Clinic & Hobby Show

Participate in Our together your program. Please encourage your spouse, family members and auxiliary personnel to be a part of the fun! Annual Table Clinic Table clinics may be anything you feel would be of interest and Hobby Show! to the profession and should be able to be presented in a You are invited to participate in the annual Table Clinic and minimal amount of time (5-10 minutes). New and improved Hobby Show for the 2016 Kentucky Meeting to be held on Sat- techniques, time saving ideas, case presentations, innovative urday, March 5, 2016 in the Kentucky International Convention practice tips, collectibles and crafted items represent just a few Center. This event will be held in the rear of the Exhibit Hall. of the possibilities.

The Kentucky Dental Association will offer three separate I know there are many talented people and many clinic areas. One area is reserved for clinical clinics and wonderful hobbies in our association. Let’s get together and information, the second area is for hobbies and crafts only and share our recreational interests as well as enjoy this wonderful profession.

The Table Clinic and Hobby Show will be Saturday, March 5, 2016 from NOON – 2:00 p.m. You are required to be present and remain with your clinic for the entire time. One six-foot table or a tack board will be provided (per clinic) – no ad- ditional space is available. Please indicate whether you require a tack board or table for your presentation on the reservation form.

The set up time is 11:00 a.m. – NOON. Please set up your clinic at least one half hour prior to the session. The clinics will be assigned a particular space as reservations are received. the third is for research clinics. Let’s work together to make Look for your name and topic displayed on each table. For this the best year ever! There are cash awards for each area students or groups, please identify the primary participant (one (clinical, hobby and research). person) and then name each individual participant. Students use name only, not intended degree.

1ST Place is $200.00 2ND Place is $100.00 No Audiovisual Equipment Will Be Provided by 3RD Place is $50.00 the KDA!

In past years this has been a very popular and well-attended So that the committee may make the necessary preparations to feature at the spring meeting. There is so much information to ensure that your clinic needs are met, it is requested that you share. This would be a great office project with everyone par- complete the application and return it to the Kentucky Dental ticipating or hygienists and assistants could work together or Association office by February 15, 2016. separately to represent your office. Also, individuals are very welcome to present their clinic. There is ample time to put All dental participants must be members of the Kentucky Dental Association.

13 Table Clinic & Hobby Show

Reserve Space for Me to Present

Table Clinic______Hobby______Research Clinic______

Kentucky Dental Association Annual Meeting Saturday, March 5, 2016 – Noon To 2:00 P.M. Kentucky International Convention Center – Rear Of Exhibit Hall

Title (Please Print):______

______

Print Name:______Degree:______

Address:______

Organization or Study Club:______

Student & School Attending:______

Practitioner or Educator:______

E-Mail Address of Primary Participant:______

If more than one name is listed, please indicate the name of the primary participant.

Set-Up Time: 11:00 A.M. - Noon – In the Rear of the Exhibit Hall

Indicate Which You Require for Your Clinic: Tack Board______Table______

Participants Must Be Present for the Entire Session!

Please return completed application by February 15, 2016 to:

Kentucky Dental Association Table Clinic & Hobby Show 1920 Nelson Miller Parkway Louisville, KY 40223

Additional Participants:______

______

______

Additional applications can be obtained from the KDA office. Call 502-489-9121 or 1-800-292-1855.

No Audiovisual Equipment Will Be Provided by the KDA! All Dentists Participating in the Table Clinic and Hobby Show Must Be Members of the Kentucky Dental Association.

14 Hotel Accommodations

For your convenience, we will have room blocks at the Hyatt Regency Hotel and The Courtyard by Marriott.

For reservations, please contact the hotel directly or visit our website at www.kyda.org for links to each hotel for making on-line reservations.

The Hyatt Regency Hotel (888) 421-1442 311 South Fourth Street Louisville, KY 40202 Room Rate: $175.00 Single/Double Reservation Deadline: February 12, 2016 Self-Parking: $13.00 overnight/ $10.00 for the day Valet Parking: $20.00 overnight/ $12.00 for the day https://aws.passkey. com/g/50408260

The Courtyard by Marriott Louisville Downtown (502) 562-0200 100 South Second Street Louisville, KY 40202 Room Rate: $149.00 Reservation Deadline: February 11, 2016 Parking: $6.00 day/Self-Parking – When paid through your hotel bill. Otherwise, standard rates of $1 per 30 minutes up to a $10 daily maximum applies. http://cwp.marriott.com/sdfdt/kentuckydentalassociation/

When making reservations, please indicate affiliation with the Kentucky Dental Association to receive listed room rates. Parking prices are subject to change.

15 KDPAC D o n a t i o n s Mark Your Calendar for the 2017 Kentucky Meeting August 24-27, 2017 Give to Your Kentucky French Lick Resort Dental Political Action French Lick, IN Committee. Your KDPAC Needs You Earn 2 CE Points by Visiting More Than Ever! Your Exhibitors! The Kentucky Board of Dentistry will no longer give 2 hours of Student Member $10.00 New Dentist Member $25.00 CE credit for attending our meeting, HOWEVER, you may now (After 5 years of practice, individual membership rates apply) Individual Membership $50.00 earn up to 2 CE credits by visiting your exhibitors in the Century Club Membership $100.00 exhibit hall. Simply complete up to 2 sign-off cards, each contain- Millennium Club Membership $200.00 ing ten sign-off squares, for a total of 2 CE points. Each square

This is a voluntary contribution for dental political action must be stamped by a different exhibitor you have visited. You and is not limited to the above amounts. No one will be may find these cards at the KDA registration desk in the lobby of favored or disadvantaged based upon the amount of, or the Kentucky International Convention Center. failure to make a contribution. If your practice is incorpo- rated, PAC contributions must be written on a personal check. Contributions are not deductible for federal in- come tax purposes. Federal law requires political commit- tees to report the name, mailing address, occupation and Plus, Visit Your name of employer for each individual whose contributions Exhibitors and aggregate in excess of $200.00 in a calendar year. Encounter Some Make your contribution payable to: Kentucky Dental Political Action Committee Fun Characters! c/o Dr. Douglas H. McCall, Treasurer 1920 Nelson Miller Parkway (Thank ya, Thank ya, Louisville, KY 40223-2164 very much!)

We’re not sayin, but Elvis might be in the building! He might just be roaming the Hall, while you shop and score some great deals! Mr. Sparkle and some other fun guys, might be there, as well! You might even see a zoo animal or two! But, you will never know if you don’t go!! So, get in there and get your picture taken with your BFF or someone else you like!

16 R e g i s t r a t i o n I n f o r m a t i o n

Register Early and Save Refund Policy All course fees increase $10 (per ticket) after February 19th. Refund Deadline: March 1, 2016. Send written request for refund Tickets will be sold based on availability. with badges and tickets to the Kentucky Dental Association, Attn: Todd Edwards, 1920 Nelson Miller Parkway, Louisville, KY 40223. Use the registration form included in this brochure. Form No refunds will be given after the stated deadline regardless of the may be copied. List all staff members, spouses, etc. on the reason. Refunds are processed after the close of the meeting. doctor’s form. Select CE courses or special event tickets. Complete form in its entirety and mail to the Kentucky Dental Your Comfort is Important! Association office by February 19th. Forms postmarked after February 19th will be returned. Forms that are not legible will We all have different ideas of the ideal indoor temperature – you also be returned. Registrations are processed in the order may find the temperature in lecture rooms and the exhibit hall “too received. Fees are payable to the Kentucky Dental Associa- hot” or “too cold” for comfort. Try as we might, we can’t guarantee tion in U.S. funds by check, money order, MasterCard or the temperature will be “just right” for everyone, so please come Visa. Credit card users must supply a new credit card number prepared: dress in layers and bring a sweater or light jacket to the within 24-hours of denial notification or ordered tickets will meeting. be returned to inventory. Fees will be assessed, up to the maximum allowed by law, for checks not honored by the bank. Registration Materials Badges and tickets are mailed to those who pre-register prior to Tickets will not be held. You may also register on-line at the meeting. Registration materials will be mailed to those who https://www.kyda.org/ky-meeting- pre-register around the first of February, 2016. It is the respon- registration.html sibility of the attendees to bring all necessary items with them to the meeting. Obtain a plastic badge holder, on-site meeting Lost Tickets program and a room assignment list at the registration desk during Lost tickets are replaced at the original cost based on availability. registration hours. Also, please remember to check the KDA website at https:// Room Capacity www.kyda.org/the-kentucky-meeting.html to see if All rooms are set to maximum seating capacity. Space in limited the course you are attending has a handout. attendance courses is restricted by the speaker to insure quality instruction. On-site Registration Hours Friday, March 4, 2016 Please note that room space dictates the number of tickets avail- 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. able and courses could sell out before the meeting begins. Pre-registration does not guarantee a ticket. Saturday, March 5, 2016 7:30 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.

KDA Non-Solicitation Policies Sunday, March 6, 2016 All speakers are contracted by the Kentucky Dental Associa- No Registration tion. Utilization of said speakers by other persons or groups will not be permitted unless approved prior to the meeting by Please note that all continuing education courses the Council on Annual Session. scheduled for Sunday will be held in the Hyatt Hotel. Tickets will be sold at the door for Sunday courses With the exception of exhibitors operating with designated based on availability. booth spaces, no attendee may solicit business on the exhibit A Message From Your Meeting Planner floor or in any other Kentucky Dental Association convention Dear KDA/ADA Member, I would like to encourage you to share this space. Violation of this policy will result in expulsion from the program with your staff members and your families as programs are mailed meeting. only to KDA/ADA members. We have events on our schedule in which fam- ily/staff members may like to participate. Bring your whole family and join us The Kentucky Dental Association does not promote any for the fun! products that may be recommended by speakers, nor do the Sincerely, Janet Glover, KDA Director of Meetings speaker’s views necessarily represent those of the Kentucky Dental Association. All program information has been compiled by Janet Glover, Director of Meetings.

17 CE Course Quick Reference Guide

Thursday, March 3, 2016 Category Code Title Presenter Audience Page

TMD TA1 What Dental Professionals Need to Know about TMD Okeson Open to All! 21

Friday, March 4, 2016 Category Code Title Presenter Audience Page

Sleep Apnea FM1 Incorporating Sleep Apnea Into Your Practice Murphy D, H, AUX, S 22

Radiology FM2 It’s Time to Clean Up Your Image Parks D, AS, H, S 22

IV Sedation FM3 Hypertension and Hypotension; IV Sedation Henry/Bowen D, H, AUX, S 22

Technology FM4 Digital Dental Product Review Moorhead D, H, AUX 23

Finance FM5 Interactive Financial Goal Planning Boardman/Reynolds D 23

OSHA/Infection Control FM6 OSHA and Infection Control Byrd D, H, AUX 24

Restorative FM7 The Modern Restorative Practice DiTolla D, H, AUX 24

Practice Management FM8 Playing by the Rules Currans D, H, AUX 25

CAD/CAM FM9 KYCADCAMp™ Bewley/Harmon D, AS, H 25

Endodontics FM10 Restorative Endodontics-Lecture/Hands-On Workshop Fleury D 25

Gypsum/Model Work FM11 Gypsum and Model Work for Dental Professionals Pickett D, H, AUX 26

Sleep Apnea FA12 Treating OSA in Your Practice Murphy D, H, AUX 26

Prevention FA13 Preventative Products Roundtable Luncheon H 26

Oral Surgery FA14 Bisphosphonates, Osteonecrosis of the Jaws Kushner D, H, AUX 26

Practice Transitions FA15 Dental Practice Transitions Boardman/Reynolds D 27

Restorative FA16 The Monolithic Revolution DiTolla D, H, AUX 27

Oral Surgery FA17 When Apnea Appliances Do Not Work Curtis D, H, AUX 27

Implants FA18 Everything You Need to Know about Implants Clagett/von Lackum/Morgan D, H, AUX 28

Digital Restoration FA19 The Digital Restoration Revolution Gately Open to All 28

Online Marketing FA20 SEO After Mobilegeddon Zib D, H, AUX 28

Practice Management FA21 Getting the Most out of Internal Marketing Demske Open to All 29

Practice Management FA22 Advanced Communication Skills for Dental Teams Murphy Open to All 29

Oral Surgery FA23 Complications in Dentistry Kushner D, H, AUX 29

Crown/Bridge FA24 Live Crown Placement Bewley/Harmon D, AS, H 29 18 CE Course Quick Reference Guide

Saturday, March 5, 2016 Category Code Title Presenter Audience Page

Lawsuit Protection SM1 Improved Patient Care through Lawsuit Protection Mangelson D, H 33

Periodontics SM2 A Better Perio Debridement Protocol Donley H 33

Radiation Safety SM3 Radiation Safety for Dental Auxiliaries Grammer H, AUX 34

Dental Implants SM4 Implants: Developing the Optimal Treatment Plan Nation D, H, AUX 34

Cosmetic Dentistry SM5 Less Is More Rodriguez/Stapleton D, H, AUX 35

Licensure SM6 Tips for Improved Success on Board Exams King D, H, AUX 35

Medicaid SM7 Navigating Kentucky Medicaid 2016 Rich/Caudill D, H, AUX 36

Finance SM8 18th Annual Economic & Investment Outlook Sexton D, H, AUX 36

Oral Pathology SM9 21st Century: Management of Head & Neck Cancers Flynn/Khan D, H, AUX 36

KY Board of Dentistry SM10 New Board Rules for Continuing Education Beyer D, H, AUX 37

Military Dentistry SA11 The Civilian Dentist’s Role in America’s Defense Ball D, H, AUX 37

Oral Surgery SA12 Pearls & Pitfalls in Dental Surgery for General Practitioner Krishnan D, H, AUX 37

Kids Endodontics SA13 Modern Kids Endodontics Raybould D, H, AUX 37

Geriatric Dentistry SA14 The Boomers are Coming…Are You Ready? Mansfield/Oliveira/Antimisiaris D, H, AUX 38

Oral Pathology SA15 I’ve Found This Lesion Kushner/Shumway/de Azevedo D, H, AUX 38

Sunday, March 6, 2016 Category Code Title Presenter Audience Page

CPR SU1 CPR Certification Dewayne Livers D, H, AUX 39

Medical Emergencies SU2 Medical Emergencies in the Dental Office Kushner D, H, AUX 39

KASPER SU3 Recognizing Drug Abuse & Kasper Update Byrd D, H, AUX 39

Audience Key D - Dentist DS - Dental Student H - Hygienist AS - Dental Assistant AUX - Auxillary S - Staff

Course Code Key FM - Friday Morning FA - Friday Afternoon SM - Saturday Morning SA - Saturday Afternoon SU - Sunday 19 Please support our exhibitors and 2016 sponsors, as they help support your Kentucky Kentucky Meeting. DELTA DENTAL PLAN OF KY Meeting THE KENTUCKY CANCER PROGRAM THE JAMES GRAHAM BROWN CANCER CENTER Sponsors PATTERSON DENTAL CORPORATION HENRY SCHEIN DENTAL NASHVILLE DENTAL, INC. PROCTER & GAMBLE/CREST ORAL B AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR ASSET PROTECTION ADL DENTAL LABORATORY OFFICITE KY DENTAL LABORATORY ASSOCIATION REAL WORLD ENDO® BRASSELER CARESTREAM DENTAL WHIP MIX PLANMECA USA PARAGON MANAGEMENT & SIKKA SOFTWARE & WEAVE Exhibitors IVOCLAR VIVADENT KYCADCAM The Kentucky Dental SIRONA Association wishes to thank Visit Our “French Lick” Information the following Booth in the Exhibit Hall! for their generous French Lick is our New Destination for 2017, 2018! sponsorship Get ready! Our new Kentucky Meeting home for 2017 and 2018 will be French Lick Resort in Indiana. Work will begin in late 2016 to revamp the Kentucky International Convention Center, of the 2016 so we were forced to find a new venue. Difficultly finding a new place in Kentucky that would suit our needs led us to beautiful French Lick. Stop by our information booth and pick up some Kentucky Meeting... information about beautiful French Lick Resort. We can’t wait to see you there! Visit them at: http://www.frenchlick.com/

20 T h u r s d a y M a r c h 3 DR. JEFFREY OKESON This course will present a sound, straight forward approach to treating many mastica- TICKET #: TA1 tory pain problems. Emphasis will be placed on proper diagnosis, so that correct therapy can be selected for each patient. Principles used to locate the site and source Thursday, March 3, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. of pain will be presented. The role of occlusion in TMD will be discussed in detail. “What Every Dental Professional Needs Specific information will be provided for the management of the two most common to Know about TMD” types of temporomandibular disorders; masticatory muscle pain and intracapsular TMJ pain. 4 C.E. HOURS FEE: $200.00 (Includes Lunch) Objectives: All proceeds benefit the Kentucky Dental Foundation. • To identify those pain disorders that will likely respond to your therapy from Lunch begins at 11:30 a.m. those that will not. • The relationship between occlusion and temporomandibular disorders. SPECIAL OFFER: Purchase a ticket to Dr. Jeffrey Okeson’s Thursday course and • The most favorable condylar position for restorative dentistry and TMD. receive one complimentary ticket to any ONE HOUR continuing education course • The appropriate use of occlusal appliance therapy. presented in the exhibit hall on Friday, March 4th. See his Bio on page 49. Choose Your Free Combo: TA1A – Dr. Jeffrey Okeson & Dr. William J. Moorhead - $200.00 TA1B – Dr. Jeffrey Okeson & Mr. Craig Pickett - $200.00 TA1C – Dr. Jeffrey Okeson & Dr. Mark Murphy - $200.00

Open to Everyone! Please note that this course will be held in the Hyatt Hotel

Your Comfort Is Important To Us! We all have different ideas of the ideal indoor temperature Classroom Etiquette – you may find the temperature in lecture rooms and the Please remember to “silence” your cell phones and exhibit hall “too hot” or “too cold” for comfort. Try as we pagers while seated in classrooms. Please step outside might, we can’t guarantee the temperature will be “just right” to receive/conduct phone calls, so you do not disturb for everyone, so please come prepared: dress in layers and other attendees. bring a sweater or light jacket to the meeting.

Scientific Program Disclaimer Come and Say, “Hello!” The Kentucky Dental Association and the Council on Annual Session and Scientific Session Committee to Katie George, 2015 Miss Kentucky make every effort to present high-caliber speakers in their respective areas of expertise. The speakers’ USA! presentations in no way imply endorsement of any Miss Kentucky will be around product, technique or service presented during these presentations. The Kentucky Dental Association during the day in our exhibit hall specifically disclaims responsibility for any material on Friday! Get an autograph presented. from Katie. Get Your picture In addition, participants must always be aware of the taken with Katie. Bring your hazards of using limited knowledge in integrating new friends. Don’t miss the fun!! techniques or procedures into their practice. Only Another excellent reason to visit sound evidence-based dentistry should be used in patient therapy. our exhibit hall and score some great deals! 21 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

DR. MARK MURPHY At the completion of the lecture, the participant will TICKET #: FM1 be able to: 1. Alter technique to better manage difficult patients and anatomic variations Friday, March 4, 2016 8:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. 2. Identify and correct intraoral technical errors “Incorporating Sleep Apnea into your 3. Identify and correct extraoral technical errors Practice: From Getting Started to Medical 4. Evaluate current quality assurance program and modify the program to optimize Billing” radiographic image quality Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory See his Bio on page 49. 3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dentists/Auxiliary DR. ROBERT HENRY & This course will allow the general practitioner to survey the current landscape of MR. C. PAUL BOWEN medical and dental treatments for sleep apnea and decide how and if they want TICKET #: FM3 to evolve into this life saving arena. The overview will cover marketing, physician communication, basic treatment philosophies, appliance choices, medical billing and Friday, March 4, 2016 the financial and emotional impact on your practice and team. Sleep medicine has 8:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. progressed in both the diagnosis and treatment protocol and outcome predictability. It is estimated that 25% of the population is at risk for this life threatening condition 3 C.E. HOURS and dentistry is at the frontlines. Mark will help you begin to chart a course into the FEE: $90.00 Dentists various aspects of this treatment construct. This course is an overview to help you $70.00 Staff determine if you want to treat these patients. It is not a substitute for full training in Dentists/Auxiliary sleep dentistry. Other more involved courses will be discussed and compared. Dr. Robert Henry – “Hypertension and Hypotension: Common Learning Objectives: Problems and Simple Solutions” • General understanding of the sleep related conditions and the role of the dental team. Course Objectives: • Effective communication with physicians and their offices. 1) Discuss hypertension and hypotension guidelines and how these conditions may • Develop a matrix for marketing sleep appliance therapy to current patients affect your dental treatment plan and prospects. 2) Understand how clonidine works and why it may be helpful in the dental • Overview of the medical billing process and the financial and emotional impact setting for hypertension on your practice. 3) Describe cases where clonidine was used with success 4) Describe precautions and contraindications of clonidine use See his Bio on page 49. Mr. C. Paul Bowen – “IV Sedation, Empowering Patients and Your Practice”

DR. EDWIN T. PARKS Navigating the crossroads of incorporating IV Sedation into your practice. TICKET #: FM2 Topics presented will include, pros and cons of IV sedation, regional demographics, Friday, March 4, 2016 8:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Kentucky statutes and regulations, a brief pharmacology of IV anesthetics, pearls of “It’s Time to Clean up Your Image: Better sedation and using a third-party provider for IV sedation. Radiographic Technique” See their Bios on pages 47 & 45. 3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dental Assistants/Hygienists

This lecture will review the basic principles of image geometry, common errors seen in both intraoral and extraoral imaging and describe methods to correct technique errors and modifications needed for digital imaging.

• Apply technique principles and patient management strategies. • Identify and correct common errors that occur on intraoral and extraoral images. • Improve the quality of radiographs taken in the office.

22 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

DR. WILLIAM J. MOORHEAD JOHN BOARDMAN, TICKET #: FM4 ANDY REYNOLDS, BRIAN BURTON & Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. CAMERON HAMILTON “Digital Dental Product Review” TICKET #: FM5 Limited to 50 Participants Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall Friday, March 4, 2016 Sponsored by WEAVE & Sikka Software 9:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. “Interactive Financial Goal Planning: An Introduction to Financial 1 C.E. HOUR Coaching” FEE: $35.00 Limited to 20 Participants Dentists/Auxiliary 2.5 C.E. HOURS SPECIAL OFFER: Purchase a ticket to Dr. Jeffrey Okeson’s Thursday course FEE: $100.00 and receive one complimentary ticket to any ONE HOUR continuing education Dentists Only course presented in the exhibit hall on Friday, March 4th.

We see many new dental products advertised each week in our practice. Digital products, including dental software products, can be some of the most difficult decisions. Will it do what is says? Will it be cost effective for my practice? This program seeks to interactively discuss the key fundamentals that differentiate nearly all financially independent dentists. Attendees will participate in a self-evalu- In this fast paced one-hour course, Dr. Moorhead looks at the best new digital dental ating process, seeking to establish three personalized, self-determined recommenda- products and gives you the information you need to make an informed decision. tions that can be implemented immediately. Financial Advocates and Personal CFOs from Ballast, Inc. have designed this course based on their personal coaching experi- Course objectives: ence with dentists across the country. This micro coaching session will illuminate • To explore new products and solutions the financially independent small business owners’ thoughts about finances and their • To incorporate new technology into your practice business, while goal planning along their career. Attendees will learn that financial • Learn tools to best evaluate cost effectiveness of the new tools you’re considering independence is not a secret for only the lucky, rather it is a methodical process that is applied throughout a career. See his Bio on page 48.

Disclosure: Ballast, Inc. (“Ballast”) is a registered investment advisor. Certain advisory persons of Ballast are also registered representatives of Comprehensive Asset Management and Servicing, Inc. (“CAMAS”), 2001 Hwy 46, Ste. 506, Parsippany, NJ 07054, 1-800-637- 3211, Member FINRA/SIPC. In their separate capacity as registered representatives, securities are offered through CAMAS. Ballast and CAMAS are not affiliated.

See their Bios on pages 44, 50, 45 & 47.

23 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

PATTY BONASSO BYRD DR. MICHAEL DiTOLLA TICKET #: FM6 TICKET #: FM7

Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon “OSHA and Infection Control in the “The Modern Restorative Practice” Dental Office 2016” Sponsored by the Kentucky Dental Laboratory Association 3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dentists/Auxiliary

3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $90.00 Dr. DiTolla’s approach to preps and impressions includes step-by-step instruction and Dentists/Auxiliary was tested on the most average dentist he knows—himself! Many courses focus on large restorative cases to teach these principles, the types of cases most clinicians do Kentucky OSHA requires that all dental personnel be trained in the Bloodborne once or twice a year. This presentation will focus on what dentists spend most of Pathogen Standard and the revised Hazard Communication/GHS Standard. Dental their time doing: one and two unit cases. Several new high-strength, cementable all- personnel should receive an initial training and thereafter, an annual update. This ceramic restorations have made serious in-roads into the number of PFMs being done course reviews the following standards and guidelines and offers suggestions on how every year. CAD/CAM technology in the dental laboratory has helped to make these to implement them in your office: restorations more consistent in terms of fit, contact and occlusion. Full contour zirconia and lithium disilicate restorations have already begun to revolutionize the • OSHA Hazard Communication Standard/GHS Standard lab industry, and their use will be discussed. Digital shade taking has improved to the (must comply by June 1, 2016) point where in addition to dentists using it, many labs QC their restorations with it, • OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Standard as well. Modern anesthesia techniques allow us to now deliver single tooth anesthesia • CDC Sterilization and Disinfection Guidelines 2009 to mandibular molars as well, avoiding lower blocks, which are the most frequently • The Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act missed injection. Digital impressions allow us to make the process fully digital and • U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines for the Management of Occupational make restorations more accurate and more economical, as well. Exposures to HBV, HCV, and HIV and Recommendations for post exposure prophylaxis Course Objectives: • CDC guidelines for hand hygiene in healthcare After completing this program, the dental professional should be able to: • CDC Dental Guidelines from 2003 • Recognize the shift from PFMs to monolithic materials that allow the clinician to use This presentation will provide a very practical approach to implementing the high strength materials, while satisfying patient’s esthetic desires. regulations and guidelines in the dental office. • Understand when the use of a rapid anesthesia technique and how anesthetizing mandibular molars without a block is beneficial for clinicians and patients. See her Bio on page 45. • Understand digital impressions and their use in digital restorative dentistry and see a demonstration of each of the currently available systems. • Be familiar with full contour zirconia and the pros and cons of using this structural ceramic material as a crown and bridge material. • Cut through the all-ceramic decision confusion, and understand how the CAD/CAM milling process can improve consistency and quality. • Stop calls from your lab about needing more room or a new impression. • Distinguish the correct shade. • Lower the incidence of remakes dramatically (resulting in increased profitability!)

See his Bio on page 46.

24 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

ANGIE CURRANS DR. ALEX FLEURY TICKET #: FM8 TICKET #: FM10

Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. “Playing by the Rules: Submitting “Restorative Endodontics: A Modern ‘Clean’ Claims” Standard of Care for Long-Term Success” – Lecture and Hands-On Session 4 C.E. HOURS Limited to 50 Participants FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Presented by Real World Endo® Dentists/Auxiliary Sponsored by Brasseler and Carestream Dental

What documentation and submitting Clean Claims can do for your practice. Many 6 C.E. HOURS think submitting claims are simple, and they can be, with the correct up to date FEE: $150.00 Dentists information. Understand how to code a claim and to recognize common errors. Dentists Documenting seems like such a simple task, but do you really know what is expected in documentation? Discuss examples of what is considered acceptable and unaccept- Restorative Endodontics (RE) is based on minimally invasive root canal preparations able documentation. No matter what your number of years in dentistry, there are and bioceramic bonded obturation that enhance the long term biomechanical success always new things to learn. of the endodontically treated tooth. It (RE) is based on a biologic approach that emphasizes debridement and disinfection rather than shaping for obturation. This See her Bio on page 45. Real World Endo presentation is highly practical and will describe (in detail) numerous facets of clinical endodontics, utilizing a “Case Based Learning Approach.” A premolar and molar clinical case will be discussed in detail that will demonstrate both the Basic and Advanced instrumentation and Obturation Technique, as well some technique variations to handle more challenging cases. The principal scientific concepts for suc- cessful endodontics will be presented, as well as new technology and techniques that emphasize responsible shaping and HA (hydroxyapatite) bonding inside the root canal.

A new instrumentation and obturation system (ESX®) will be introduced that incor- porates the above concepts. All participants will have the opportunity to validate these concepts during the hands-on session. Real World Endo remains dedicated to the preservation of the natural dentition through smarter, more thoughtful endodon- tics. This presentation is a must see for those practitioners committed to clinical efficiency without sacrificing quality care for their patients.

DR. JEREMY BEWLEY & DR. BRAD HARMON During this lecture/hands-on participants will learn: TICKET #: FM9 1. Attendees will be able to appreciate the scientific concepts for success by incorpo- rating a few new simple steps during clinical care. Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. 2. Attendees will understand the importance of proper straight-line access and the “KYCADCAMp™” factors necessary to accomplishing the task. Sponsored by Ivoclar Vivadent, KYCADCAM, Sirona and Patterson Dental 3. Participants will recognize the many applications for fibre-optic ultrasonics in endodontics. 6 C.E. HOURS 4. Understand how to properly use the ESX® NiTi rotary file and instrumentation FEE: $299.00 Dentists $99.00 Assistants system. Dentists/Assistants 5. Recognize the correct way to use an ultrasonic, in the pursuit of hidden canals. 6. All attendees will completely understand the term, “Hydraulic Condensation” and Our mission is to remove the mystery of CAD/CAM integration by engaging dentists its application during obturation. who are investigating the technology with a hands-on course that is guided by some 7. Attendees will gain insight into the use of the new bioceramic materials in both, of the most experienced and successful CAD/CAM users in the state of Kentucky. surgical and non-surgical endodontic care. 8. Participants will become familiar with a novel and very efficient (drilless) post The KYCADCAMp™ program has been designed to educate you on the benefits of preparation technique. CAD/CAM technology. You will have the unique opportunity to interact with doctors 9. All attendees will understand that endodontics and restorative dentistry are not who have successfully integrated CAD/CAM into their practice. So come join us and separate entities. Rather, they are part of a larger continuum: The Endo-Restorative spend some valuable time getting hands-on CAD/CAM experience in an educational Continuum. environment. As part of the KYCADCAMp™ program, you will have an opportunity to bring your own cases and mill them out with the CEREC system. You will be IMPORTANT: Please bring two to four accessed, extracted teeth that are pat- completing four cases, two of which will come from your own practice. ent to the apex with a size 10 hand file. Also bring a sample of your current rotary instrumentation system for comparative evaluation (bring at least one or two size 25 See their Bios on pages 44 & 47. tip rotary files from your current system).

See his Bio on page 46. 25 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

MR. CRAIG PICKETT ROUNDTABLE LUNCHEON TICKET #: FM11 TICKET #: FA13

Friday, March 4, 2016 10:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Friday, March 4, 2016 “Gypsum and Model Work for Noon – 2:00 p.m. Dental Professionals” For Dental Hygienists Only: Limited to 50 Participants Preventative Products Sponsored by Whip Mix Roundtable Luncheon Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall 2 C.E. HOURS FEE: $65.00 1 C.E. HOUR Hygienists Only FEE: $35.00 Dentists/Auxiliary Dental Hygienists won’t want to miss this innovative Lunch & Learn program just for them! Representatives from the leading preventative products companies will partici- SPECIAL OFFER: Purchase a ticket to Dr. Jeffrey Okeson’s Thursday course and pate in this interactive session where attendees will be seated at tables for lunch and receive one complimentary ticket to any ONE HOUR continuing education course company representatives will travel the room spending time at each table describing presented in the exhibit hall on Friday, March 4th. their newest materials and answering dental hygienists’ questions.

This one hour course will cover the science of gypsum and its handling characteristics, along with correct techniques in mixing, vibrating and pouring die stones into impres- DR. GEORGE KUSHNER sion. This course is a good learning opportunity for new staff and a good review for TICKET #: FA14 those who have been doing it a long time! Friday, March 4, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m. See his Bio on page 50. “Bisphosphonates, Osteonecrosis of the Jaws (ONJ) and Dentistry - Where Are We Now and What Do We Know?”

DR. MARK MURPHY 1 C.E. HOUR TICKET #: FA12 FEE: $35.00 Dentists/Auxiliary Friday, March 4, 2016 Noon – 1:00 p.m. “Treating OSA in Your Practice” There has been a new pathologic entity which was identified in the literature in 2003. Limited to 50 Participants Patients were found to have painful exposed bony areas of the jaws which occurred Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory after simple dental procedures such as extractions. There were also reports of spon- Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall taneous exposures of bone in the jaws which were symptomatic. The common link was to the drug class of bisphosphonates. Bisphosphonates were given intravenously 1 C.E. HOUR to cancer patients to combat the hypercalcemia often seen in multiple myeloma and FEE: $35.00 metastatic cancers. This new condition was named osteonecrosis of the jaws (ONJ). Dentists/Auxiliary There are also oral forms of bisphophonate drugs such as Fosamax, Actonel and SPECIAL OFFER: Purchase a ticket to Dr. Jeffrey Okeson’s Thursday course and Boniva. Although there is a higher incidence of osteonecrosis associated with IV receive one complimentary ticket to any ONE HOUR continuing education course administration of bisphosphonates, we have seen cases of ONJ associated with oral presented in the exhibit hall on Friday, March 4th. bisphosphonates that were prescribed to treat osteoporosis.

This brief overview will cover marketing, physician communication, basic treatment The lecture will review what we currently know about bisphosphonates, includ- philosophies, appliance choices, medical billing and the financial and emotional impact ing recommendations for dental management and prevention of ONJ. We will also on your practice and team. It is estimated that 25% of the population is at risk for this discuss what is uncertain at this early stage of the new pathologic entity. life threatening condition and dentistry is at the frontlines. Mark will help you begin to chart a course into the various aspects of this treatment construct. This course is Objectives: an overview to help introduce you to dental sleep medicine, and not a substitute for 1. The participant will understand the new pathologic entity named osteonecrosis of full training in sleep dentistry. the jaws (ONJ) and the link to bisphosphonate drugs. 2. The participant will understand how modifications may have to be made in the See his Bio on page 49. treatment plan to accommodate bisphosphonate patients. 3. The participant will understand the current recommendations in prevention, man- agement and treatment of ONJ.

See his Bio on page 48. 26 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

JOHN BOARDMAN, DR. MICHAEL DiTOLLA ANDY REYNOLDS, TICKET #: FA16 GERALD PSIMER & JERRY PSIMER Friday, March 4, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. TICKET #: FA15 “The Monolithic Revolution”

Friday, March 4, 2016 3 C.E. HOURS 1:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m. FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dentists/Auxiliary

In the last nine years there has been a stunning change from Porcelain Fused to Metal “Dental Practice Transitions: How to Maximize the Value (PFM) crowns to full porcelain crowns. As a dentist who practices within the largest of Your Dental Practice” lab in the U.S., Dr. DiTolla has access to tens of thousands of doctor’ preps and im- pressions on a monthly basis and has an intimate knowledge of the common habits of 1.5 C.E. HOURS the dentists getting the best restorative results. CAD/CAM technology has ushered FEE: $35.00 in a new generation of digital impressions and high strength cementable restorations Dentists that have changed the face of dentistry. Come join one of dentistry’s most entertain- ing speakers as he takes us along the path of the Monolithic Porcelain Revolution. Most dentists who own their own business envision a day when they hand the keys to a buyer in exchange for a handsome lump sum. Recent transitioning dentists, Dentistry changes every year. How will you stay updated? however, are finding the process to be much more difficult than their predecessors experienced over the past several years. States Dr. Gordon Christensen, “It is difficult to keep a group of dentists awake and com- pletely glued to a presentation, Mike, and you did it!” This educational presentation seeks to provide a proactive set of tools to help those dentists who will likely be selling their practice anywhere between the upcoming “Dr. Micheal Ditolla’s commitment to excellence is obvious, right from the start. His sense of months to the next ten years. The conversation will discuss recent economic trends humor and quick wit will entertain you while you learn that there is life after managed care, in the dental community, valuation estimates of practices, when to sell, how to in- and that compromise is a four letter word.” David Honbrook crease the sales price, how to avoid unnecessary taxes, how to value goodwill, as well as several other topics to help provide the maximum value for your business. See his Bio on page 46.

As CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ practitioners, we provide a well-rounded approach toward effectively transitioning a business, while making the sale as beneficial as possible to all parties involved. DR. WILLIAM CURTIS TICKET #: FA17 Presenters: Gerald Psimer, MBA, Masters in Taxation – Psimer and Associates Friday, March 4, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Jerry Psimer, CPA – Psimer and Associates “When Oral Appliances Don’t Work: Surgical Andy Reynolds, CFP®, MBA – Boardman Wealth Planning Options for Sleep Apnea and a Potpourri of John Boardman, CFP® - Boardman Wealth Planning Major Maxillofacial Reconstruction”

Disclosure: 3 C.E. HOURS Ballast, Inc. (“Ballast”) is a registered investment advisor. Certain advisory persons of FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Ballast are also registered representatives of Comprehensive Asset Management and Dentists/Auxiliary Servicing, Inc. (“CAMAS”), 2001 Hwy 46, Ste. 506, Parsippany, NJ 07054, 1-800-637- 3211, Member FINRA/SIPC. In their separate capacity as registered representatives, Course objectives: securities are offered through CAMAS. Ballast and CAMAS are not affiliated. 1) The participant will have an understanding of oropharyngeal and hypopharyngeal anatomy See their Bio on pages 44 & 50. 2) The participant will understand different treatment modalities for sleep apnea 3) The participant will be able to discuss surgical options with patients that fail oral appliance therapy 4) The participant will understand major maxillofacial reconstruction options

See his Bio on page 46.

27 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

DR. RYAN CLAGETT, MARYANN GATELY DR. KATE VON LACKUM TICKET #: FA19 & DR. WILLIAM MORGAN Friday, March 4, 2016 1:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. TICKET #: FA18 “The Digital Restoration Revolution” Limited to 50 Participants Friday, March 4, 2016 Sponsored by Henry Schein Dental and Planmeca USA 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall “Everything You Need to Know about Implants” 4 C.E. HOURS 2 C.E. HOURS FEE: $95.00 Dentists $75.00 Staff FEE: $65.00 Dentists/Auxiliary Open to Everyone Dr. Ryan Clagett – “Keys to Treatment Success – Clinical Pearls for Successful Diagnosis, Implant and Periodontal This course will demonstrate the current state of the art dental scanning and mill- Therapy, as well as Tips for Treatment Plan Presentation and ing systems for chairside and lab fabricated restorations. It will walk through a live Patient Psychology” patient case from scanning of the preparation, to design of the restoration, fabrication of the crown and delivery of the restoration. It will review the digital workflow in You know what your patients need. Why don’t they SAY, “YES”? a dental practice and compare and contrast efficiencies with traditional procedures. The course will also demonstrate digital work flow for fabrication of a restoration by Following the completion of this course attendees will be able to: • Diagnose more thoroughly and offer more comprehensive dentistry to your patients an offsite dental lab and how dental labs can produce better restorations in less time • Use technology to diagnose and promote patient acceptance with digital technology. • Understand periodontal disease and be able to communicate the need for treatment to your patients Course Objectives: • Be confident in recommending simple and complex implant restorative treatment Attendees should understand the digital workflow for chairside, single appointment plans restorations and lab fabricated digital restorations, including the efficiencies and • Use patient psychology to enhance treatment plan acceptance advantages of digital scanning and designing versus traditional methods.

Dr. Kate von Lackum – “New Treatment Modalities See her Bio on page 46. for Peri-Implantitis”

Peri-implant diseases are a group of inflammatory processes around dental implants which includes either soft tissue inflammation, alone (peri-implant mucositis), or a combination with progressive loss of supporting bone beyond biological bone remod- JASON ZIB eling (peri-implantitis). A 2013 white paper presented by the American Academy of TICKET #: FA20 Periodontology reports a prevalence of approximately 30% for some form of peri- implant disease. If nearly one in three dental implants presenting to our offices could Friday, March 4, 2016 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. have disease, it is critical for today’s dentists to understand how to properly diagnose, “SEO after Mobilegeddon: More Patients, treat and refer for specialty care to address the dental implant patient’s comprehen- Less Panic” sive needs. Presented by Officite

Learning Objectives: 2 C.E. HOURS 1) What is Peri-implant mucositis vs. Peri-implantitis? Definitions and Diagnosis FEE: $50.00 2) What is the prevalence of peri-implant disease? 3) What are the etiologies and risk factors of peri-implant disease? Dentists/Auxiliary 4) What bacteria are involved in peri-implant disease? 5) What clinical conditions dictate treatment choices? Google dropped the “mobilegeddon” bomb on April 21, and SEO companies every- 6) What are the indications for Guided Bone Regeneration around diseased implants? where took cover. Now that the smoke is starting to clear, dentists everywhere 7) How to manage the dental implant patient who has been treated for have one question - what does the future of my search engine ranking look like? The peri-implantitis? answer might surprise you. Join Officite for a 60-minute discussion that will give you the knowledge you’ll need to keep welcoming new patients in the post-mobilegeddon Dr. William Morgan – “The Evolution of Implant Dentistry” era of SEO. Implant dentistry has evolved from tooth replacement in severely resorbed edentu- You will learn: lous alveolar ridges to replacement of missing teeth in partially edentulous patients in • What the “mobilegeddon” algorithm was designed to do a wide variety of situations. This has necessitated changes in technique and materials in order to satisfy functional and esthetic demands. • What changes are most likely to future-proof your website • Which SEO strategies are now achieving the highest rankings See their Bios on pages 45, 51 & 49. See his Bio on page 51.

28 F r i d a y M a r c h 4

SUE DEMSKE DR. GEORGE KUSHNER TICKET #: FA21 TICKET #: FA23

Friday, March 4, 2016 2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Friday, March 4, 2016 2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. “Getting the Most Out of “Complications in Dentistry” Internal Marketing“ Presented by Paragon Management 3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $90.00 3 C.E. HOURS Dentists/Auxiliary FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Open to Everyone As practitioners in the field of dentistry, we need to be aware that complications can This course will provide an overview of getting the most of out of internal marketing. and will occur during our treatment of patients. Fortunately, most of the complica- tions that occur are not life threatening. However, many complications require Course Objectives: extensive additional treatment and some complications can be life threatening. In • Attendees will come away with many marketing tools that can be implemented im- years past, complications were not routinely discussed in the dental community. By mediately to their practice with spending little or no money. evaluating a series of clinical complications, we can analyze the etiology and make • Attendees will learn how to influence new patient numbers and increase case ac- practitioners aware of possible adverse sequelae. The management of these compli- ceptance through internal marketing. cations will be discussed. By studying complications, we can hopefully decrease the • Attendees will leave with several marketing ideas and strategies, a team meet- potential complication rate in our own patient population. ing agenda and a planning chart to develop and implement their personalized office marketing plan. See his Bio on page 48.

See her Bio on page 46.

DR. MARK MURPHY TICKET #: FA22

Friday, March 4, 2016 2:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. “Advanced Communication Skills for Dental Teams” Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory

3 C.E. HOURS DR. JEREMY BEWLEY & DR. BRAD HARMON FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff TICKET #: FA24 Open to Everyone Friday, March 4, 2016 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. In this half-day program Mark provides a light and very entertaining program full of “Live Crown Placement with Immediate Provisional Crown useful tips and ideas that you can put to use on “Monday Morning.” This presenta- Designed and Fabricated by CEREC” tion is very well suited to a combined audience of doctors, staff and even spouses. Limited to 50 Participants By understanding the communication process, how it works and why it sometimes Sponsored by Ivoclar Vivadent, KYCADCAM, Sirona and Patterson Dental doesn’t, you will be more affective and effective within the practice team and with pa- Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall tients, friends and family. Teams will ‘get along’ better and Patients will say yes more often to you and then to your treatment plans when you develop relationships that 2 C.E. HOURS encourage mutually agreed upon outcomes, based on trust. Your goals are to know FEE: $65.00 the patient well enough to competently recommend an optimal course of treatment Dentists/Assistants for that patient, communicate well enough with the patient to arrive at “informed” consent and develop sufficient trust with that patient to “get to” yes. Live immediate implant placed with Sirona 3D CBCT and restored with CEREC.

Learning Objectives: Objectives: • Understand principals of communication and their application with patients and To demonstrate a digital workflow using integrated technologies in implant dentistry: dental teams. • Prosthetically-driven digital surgical planning • Develop strong active listening skills. • Digital fabrication of a surgical guide • Use the Learning Ladders as a patient education assessment tool. • Demonstrate guided approach to fixture placement • Digital design and chairside fabrication of an immediate provisional restoration See his Bio on page 49. See their Bios on pages 44 & 47. 29 Ticket # Thursday, March 3, 2016 Dentist Auxiliary

TA1 What Every Dental Professional Needs to Know about TMD - Okeson $200.00 $200.00 TA1A Dr. Jeffrey Okeson & Dr. William J. Moorhead $200.00 $200.00 TA1B Dr. Jeffrey Okeson & Mr. Craig Pickett $200.00 $200.00 TA1C Dr. Jeffrey Okeson & Dr. Mark Murphy $200.00 $200.00

Ticket # Friday, March 4, 2016 Dentist Auxiliary

Friday AM FM1 Incorporating Sleep Apnea Into Your Practice - Murphy $90.00 $70.00 FM2 It’s Time to Clean Up Your Image - Parks $90.00 $70.00 FM3 Hypertension and Hypotension; IV Sedation - Henry & Bowen $90.00 $70.00 FM4 Digital Dental Product Review - Moorhead $35.00 $35.00 (Limited to 50) FM5 Interactive Financial Goal Planning - Boardman & Reynolds $100.00 ----- (Limited to 20) FM6 OSHA and Infection Control - Byrd $90.00 $90.00 FM7 The Modern Restorative Practice - DiTolla $90.00 $70.00 FM8 Playing by the Rules - Currans $90.00 $70.00 FM9 KYCADCAMp™ - Bewley & Harmon $299.00 $99.00 FM10 Restorative Endodontics-Lecture/Hands-On Workshop - Fleury $150.00 ----- FM11 Gypsum and Model Work for Dental Professionals - Pickett $35.00 $35.00 (Limited to 50)

Friday PM FA12 Treating OSA in Your Practice - Murphy $35.00 $35.00 (Limited to 50) FA13 Preventative Products Roundtable Luncheon ----- $65.00 FA14 Bisphosphonates, Osteonecrosis of the Jaws - Kushner $35.00 $35.00 FA15 Dental Practice Transitions - Boardman & Reynolds $35.00 $35.00 FA16 The Monolithic Revolution - DiTolla $90.00 $70.00 FA17 When Oral Appliances Don’t Work - Curtis $90.00 $70.00 FA18 Everything You Need to Know about Implants - Clagett, von Lackum & Morgan $95.00 $75.00 FA19 The Digital Restoration Revolution - Gately $65.00 $65.00 (Limited to 50) FA20 SEO After Mobilegeddon - Zib $50.00 $50.00 FA21 Getting the Most out of Internal Marketing - Demske $90.00 $70.00 FA22 Advanced Communication Skills for Dental Teams - Murphy $90.00 $70.00 FA23 Complications in Dentistry - Kushner $90.00 $90.00 FA24 Live Crown Placement - Bewley & Harmon $65.00 $65.00 (Limited to 50)

Ticket # Saturday, March 5, 2016 Dentist Auxiliary

Saturday AM SM1 Improved Patient Care through Lawsuit Protection - Mangelson $75.00 $75.00 SM2 A Better Perio Debridement Protocol - Donley $80.00 $80.00 SM3 Radiation Safety for Dental Auxiliaries - Grammer ----- $190.00 SM4 Implants: Developing the Optimal Treatment Plan - Nation $90.00 $70.00 SM5 Less Is More - Rodriguez & Stapleton $90.00 $70.00 SM6 Tips for Improved Success on Board Exams - King $35.00 $35.00 (Limited to 50) SM7 Navigating Kentucky Medicaid 2016 - Rich & Caudill $90.00 $70.00 SM8 18th Annual Economic & Investment Outlook - Sexton $50.00 $50.00 SM9 21st Century: Management of Head & Neck Cancers - Flynn & Khan $50.00 $50.00 SM10 New Board Rules for Continuing Education - Beyer $35.00 $35.00 (Limited to 50)

30 Ticket # Saturday, March 5, 2016 Dentist Auxiliary

Saturday PM SA11 The Civilian Dentist’s Role in America’s Defense - Ball $35.00 $35.00 (Limited to 50) SA12 Pearls and Pitfalls in Dental Surgery for the General Practitioner - Krishnan $90.00 $70.00 SA13 Modern Kids Endodontics - Raybould $90.00 $70.00 SA14 The Boomers are Coming…Are You Ready? - Mansfield, Oliveira & Antimisiaris $90.00 $70.00 SA15 I’ve Found This Lesion - Kushner, Shumway & de Azevedo $35.00 $35.00

Ticket # Sunday, March 6, 2016 Dentist Auxiliary

Sunday AM SU1 CPR Certification $100.00 $100.00 SU2 Medical Emergencies in the Dental Office - Kushner $95.00 $95.00 SU3 Recognizing Drug Abuse in Dental Patients & Kasper Update - Byrd $100.00 $100.00

Special Events

SE1 William Marcus Randall Memorial Lunch $40.00 per person

SE2 President’s Reception: A Homecoming Celebration for New Dentists and Dental Students FREE (New Dentists are those out of dental school 10 years or less)

SE3 President’s Reception: A Homecoming Celebration for $35.00 per person New Dentists and Dental Students (Members/Exhibitors)

SE4 President’s Reception: A Homecoming Celebration for New Dentists and Dental Students $50.00 per person (Non-Members)

There will be a $10.00 increase in ticket prices at the door. The KDA WILL NOT replace lost tickets.

KDA Office Closing:The KDA Executive Office will close at the end of business on Tuesday, March 1, 2016 and will reopen on Tuesday, March 8, 2016 at 9:00 a.m. See Registration Form on next page...

Earn 2 CE Points by Visiting Your Exhibitors! The Kentucky Board of Dentistry will no longer give 2 hours of CE credit for attending our meeting, HOWEVER, you may now earn up to 2 CE credits by visiting your exhibitors in the exhibit hall. Simply complete up to 2 sign-off cards, each containing ten sign-off squares, for a total of 2 CE points. Each square must be stamped by a different exhibitor you have visited. You may find these cards at the KDA registration desk in the lobby of the Kentucky International Convention Center.

Find CE Course Handouts on Our Website Course handouts will be made available on the KDA’s website at http://www.kyda.org/the-kentucky-meeting.html Please note that some speakers have chosen not to provide handouts. These materials are not printed for distribution on-site. If you wish to have these materials to reference during the course, please bring a printed copy with you.

31 Registration/ticket order form MUST be postmarked by February Course Registration For 19, 2016. Any forms postmarked after this date will be returned. Deadline for return is Friday, February 19, 2016 No faxes will be accepted.

TicketsCourse/Event should be Registration mailed to: (PleaseInformation Print)

Name ______

Mailing Address ______

______

Daytime Phone + Area Code ______Fax ______

ADA # ______Email ______Dentists only

Registration ID Letter Print name of each registrant and ID Letter from list at left

K KDA Member Last Name First Name ID Letter V Visiting ADA (Please attach a 1) ______copy of 2016 ADA card) A Assistant 2) ______L Laboratory Technician 3) ______E Exhibitor H Hygienist 4) ______S/F Spouse/Family Member 5) ______A/S Auxiliary/Staff DS Dental Student 6) ______

Note: If additional space is needed, registration form may be copied.

Registration Mailing Instructions Ticketed Course/Event # Fees Total

Ticket # Ticket # Ticket # Ticket # Ticket # Ticket # Ticket # Ticket # Mail Registration Form to: 1) ______$ ______Janet Glover Kentucky Dental Association 2) ______$ ______1920 Nelson Miller Parkway Louisville, KY 40223-2164 3) ______$ ______You may also register online at https://www.kyda.org/ky-meeting- 4) ______$ ______registration.html 5) ______$ ______6) ______$ ______

Payment Method No forms accepted after February 19, 2016 Grand Total

Please check form of payment:  Visa  MasterCard  Check $ ______Credit Card # ______Exp. Date ______

Print Name ______Signature ______

32 S a t u r d a y M a r c h 5

G. KENT MANGELSON This course presents evidence-based protocols to maximize chances for resolving TICKET #: SM1 patients’ periodontal disease. From mechanical debridement to local antibiotic therapy to laser debridement, the emphasis is on what, when and how. The course Saturday, March 5, 2016 8:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. takes a learn it today – use it tomorrow approach. Attendees leave with a clear “Improved Patient Care through Lawsuit understanding and an evidence-based game plan to implement improved periodontal Protection & Prevention for Dentists” debridement strategies immediately upon returning to the office. Sponsored by the American Society for Asset Protection Periodontal and Systemic Health The latest information regarding the links Tools to identify priority patients 3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $75.00 Protocol for Diagnosis Dentists Determining what sites to treat Why we’ve been focusing on the wrong thing This course teaches proven and effective strategies to prevent and protect against lawsuits, allowing dentists the peace of mind necessary to focus on improved patient New Biofilm-based Treatment Philosophy care. You will learn lawsuit protection strategies most advisors are unaware of. It’s time to rethink etiology It’s not just about plaque and calculus • How dentists can protect 100% of their professional and personal assets from lawsuits. Demystifying Debridement • How dentists can protect their practice and personal assets in the event of Hand instrumentation versus ultrasonic scaling a judgment in excess of liability insurance or an exclusion in a policy. Magnetostrictive technology versus Piezo technology • How to avoid the most common mistakes made by dentists and their advisors. • How dentists can minimize vicarious liability for the acts of other professionals Maximizing Ultrasonic results and staff. New research on inserts Strategy for insert selection Objectives: The staged approach 1. Maintain focus on improved patient care, rather than lawsuit defense. Philosophy of use 2. Structure practice for lawsuit protection and prevention. 3. Implement legal structures that will reduce liability insurance costs. Realistic approach to adjunctive therapies Local antibiotic therapy – which and when See his Bio on page 48. Laser debridement therapy – which and when

Chairside debridement Protocols The new problem site approach Step-by-step chairside guides for doc and hygiene DR. TIMOTHY DONLEY TICKET #: SM2 Discussion All concerns and questions will be addressed Saturday, March 5, 2016 8:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. “A Better Perio Debridement Protocol – See his Bio on page 46. Step-by-step Guide for When to Treat, What to Use, How to Use It”

3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $80.00 Hygienists

Every day a significant number of patients walk into dental offices with legitimate peri- odontal needs. There are now, more than ever, compelling reasons to address these needs. Successful periodontal therapy depends on successful debridement.

33 S a t u r d a y M a r c h 5

SUSAN GRAMMER DR. MARK NATION TICKET #: SM3 TICKET #: SM4

Saturday, March 5, 2016 8:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. Saturday, March 5, 2016 8:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. “Radiation Safety for Dental Auxiliaries” “Implants: Developing the Optimal Treatment Plan - What is Trending Today 6 C.E. HOURS for Partially and Fully Edentulous FEE: $190.00 Patients with Considerations of Time, Auxiliary Space and Money”

The Kentucky Board of Dentistry amended the minimal requirements of dental auxil- iary personnel prior to taking dental radiographs under a dentist’s direct supervision 3 C.E. HOURS (201 KAR 8:570E). All dental auxiliary personnel must satisfy two (2) requirements FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff before taking x-rays in a dental office: Dentists/Auxiliary

1. Didactic - Completion of a course in radiation safety: This can be verified by This course will give a brief overview in diagnostic necessities to appropriately assess providing proof of completion of the Radiography Section of the Dental Assistants the implant patient. Once the criteria for evaluation are explained we will discuss National Board Examination or attending an approved continuing education (CE) treatment algorithms to determine the best restorative options for various situations. course (6 hours) provided by a certified presenter. This will lead to the discussion of modern restorative options that will highlight fixed and removable implant restorations for the fully edentulous and partially edentulous 2. Practical - A practicum course in x-ray technique (4 hours minimum): This is arch. Many times patients are given restorative solutions that they cannot maintain verified by a dentist’s written documentation of a student’s completion of four (4) or service appropriately due to design and cost. We will discuss the costs and design hours of instruction in dental radiography technique in the practice or by attending a keys to many modern implant restorative options available to us today. The goals of four (4) hour continuing education course in radiography technique sponsored by the the course are to recognize the necessary diagnostic and treatment parameters for Board. certain restorations, to be familiar with general design and materials used in various restorations and to understand the costs of restorations for patients initially and This course satisfies the didactic requirements of the Kentucky Board of Dentistry. during service of those restorations in the future. The course contains both, theoretical and practical clinical topics including: Course Objectives: • Basic principles and concepts of radiation • General implant diagnostic overview • Exposure factors and how they affect the radiographic image • Implant restorative options for the fully edentulous arch and large segmental • Image receptors and processing of radiographs partially edentulous arch • X-ray interaction with matter and potential biological effects • Hygiene and maintenance obstacles associated with various implant restorative • Radiation safety for both, patient and operator options • Principles of intraoral (bitewing/periapical/occlusal) imaging and clinical technique. • Cost assessment of the implant restoration and discussion of potential services • Criteria for diagnostic radiographs - technique and processing error recognition costs in the future for the patient. and correction • Radiographic film mounting and labeling and record keeping See his Bio on page 49. • Principles of Quality Assurance and implementation into clinical practice • Occupational considerations, including infection control principles, waste management principles and legal concerns • Extraoral Radiography

Successful completion of the course requires a 75% pass in a multiple-choice question examination administered at the end of the course. Participants who successfully complete the examination will receive a certificate of completion and after fulfill- ing requirement (2) above are allowed to expose radiographs on patients under the direct supervision of a dentist.

See her Bio on page 47.

34 S a t u r d a y M a r c h 5

DR. CARLA DR. KATHERINE KING RODRIGUEZ & TICKET #: SM6 DR. BRANDON STAPLETON Saturday, March 5, 2016 9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. TICKET #: SM5 “Tips for Improved Success on the Board Licensure Examinations” Saturday, March 5, 2016 Limited to 50 Participants 8:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall “Less is More: Building Beauty on a Shoestring Budget” 1 C.E. HOUR FEE: $35.00 3 C.E. HOURS Dentists/Auxiliary FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dentists/Auxiliary Currently, practical and live patient examinations are a component of the compre- hensive exam required by the vast majority of the United States and its territories. We, as dental practitioners, are professionally bound to communicate, educate and There are several examining entities within the United States who develop and ad- collaborate with our patients in order to create “ideal” treatment plans. There is minister clinical licensure exams. These entities will be introduced and discussed with no “one size fits all”, and the more options we can offer, the better choices we can regard to testing methods and administration, as well as portability of the candidates. make. Licensure examinations are conducted by licensed dental and hygiene practitioners From “How do we make this smile beautiful?” to “How do we open Vertical Dimen- and in some cases educators. The qualifications and means of examiner selection will sion on the severely closed dentition?” we are challenged daily to deal with these be reviewed, as will the requirements to retain examiner status. questions. A brief discussion of alternative paths to licensure will be discussed including licensure Must we always cut enamel to solve the problem? through portfolio, residency (NY) and the Canadian OSKI. The “Buffalo” model of progressive examination, which was piloted this year will be reviewed. What are the pros and cons to the treatments we can offer? The primary focus of this presentation will be tips for smoothly and successfully How can we do more for less? navigating clinical exams given by any agency. Advice regarding organization and preparation to time management and patient selection will be included. The course In this course the participant will hear strategies for diagnosing esthetic and functional will address the most common reasons for failures of examinations and how to needs of patients who are best treated with conservative adhesive solutions. minimize these.

Core concepts will be covered and techniques detailed in order to provide the dental A question and answer session will conclude the presentation, addressing any con- team with the knowledge to solve these problems. cerns or confusion that audience may have reading Clinical Licensure exams.

Participants of this course will learn how to do less to gain more! See her Bio on page 47.

See their Bios on pages 50 & 51.

35 S a t u r d a y M a r c h 5

DR. WILLIAM KEN RICH stocks and pinned their retirements to the booming stock market. Alan Greenspan & DR. JERRY CAUDILL kept the party alive with interest rate cuts every now and then. September of 2001 TICKET #: SM7 came along and changed things, forever. My wife was six months pregnant with our first child and stuck in Manhattan that fateful day. I worked for Merrill Lynch at the Saturday, March 5, 2016 time. The stock market survived . . . and that child will start high school next year. 9:00 a.m. – Noon “Navigating Kentucky By the mid-2000s the ride upward continued and I had moved to Morgan Stanley. I Medicaid 2016” earned my MBA at the top business school in the country and studied under Nobel Prize winners. I joined a firm in Los Angeles and started my first hedge fund. Things were just peachy weren’t they? Until 2007, at least. Then the world fell apart. I had made and lost a small fortune. Firms collapsed (including my own). The economy teetered on the brink. Interest rates were slashed to zero (where they remain to this 3 C.E. HOURS day). 401k’s jokingly became known as “201k’s” because they lost 50% of their value. FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Retirements were put on hold. Lives were interrupted. Remember? Dentists/Auxiliary Huge sums were lost. Huge sums were made back. The stock market, bond market, With the arrival of the Affordable Care Act and Medicaid expansion in Kentucky, and interest rate markets were rigged, then blew up, then jury-rigged again. You and navigating the Medicaid system has changed. Since January 2014 Kentucky has added your investments were dragged along like a cowboy with one foot stuck in the stirrup over 400,000 additional members, most of which were adults. This substantially trying to get back on his spooked horse. It continues, even now. Just one long, bad changes the demographic mix and brings the current total to approximately 1.2 mil- hangover being nursed by the Fed. lion. Avēsis, representing the four largest Kentucky MCOs, administers the dental benefits of approximately 1 million of those members. The Department of Medicaid What do you know now that you wish you had known then? What do I know now Services (DMS) has recently made significant changes to 907 KAR 1:026, the guide- that I wish I had known then? What do we BOTH know now that will be VERY lines for the Kentucky dental Medicaid program. In addition, some provider fees have important the next 18 years? Experience is the best teacher. It is hard for me to been increased, CDT codes have been added, deleted, or changed and some prior fathom taking investment advice from someone that has never lived through managing authorization requirements have been eliminated, relaxed and/or changed by several money on the morning of 9/11 or the tech bubble or the financial crisis of 2008-2009 MCOs. These changes are more far reaching than just how and what providers get or the Flash Crash of 2010 or even the volatility of the recent past. Those experienc- paid. There is also a new level of compliance and oversight that is required by the es and battle scars were invaluable teachers. Young stockbrokers read about them in Federal government. This course will chronicle these changes, how they affect your history books, now. You and I lived them and learned (or did we???) practice and the ways your MCO partners can help you to be successful in providing care to the Kentucky Medicaid population. In this session, we will gather together the wisdom we have collectively harvested the past 18 years of my annual meeting sessions and take stock of where you are in your life with respect to your practice (ongoing or selling?) and your nest egg thus far. See their Bios on pages 50 & 45. How should you invest now? How will you generate income? How will you protect some money? How will you grow some money? What will you do, now? China is problematic. Interest rates are an issue. There will be a new president elected, soon. MR. JEFFREY A. SEXTON The list of issues is endless. Can the past 18 years help us navigate these treacherous TICKET #: SM8 waters going forward? ABSOLUTELY!

Saturday, March 5, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon If you ever attended one of my sessions the past 18 years, but fell away for whatever “18th Annual Economic & Investment reason(s), I hope you will take this opportunity to come back. A few folks have at- Outlook: Back to Basics” tended almost every year, but it would be great to see some old (and you are older now!) faces again. It might be a good time for a “back to basics” investing refresher 3 C.E. HOURS course from someone that has endured the same battles you have over the past 18 FEE: $50.00 tumultuous years. You’ll leave armed and reassured. Dentists/Auxiliary See his Bio on page 50. After 18 years of presenting at the KDA Annual Meeting, it is now (sadly!) possible to look back at actual advice and recommendations and discussions of prior presenta- tions I have made and make critical assessments of what worked and what didn’t. DR. MICHAEL FLYNN & DR. ZAFRULLA KHAN TICKET #: SM9 That’s called experience. My first presentation in the Nunn Room of the Galt House was packed way back in 1997. The internet was just this new-fangled thing we were Saturday, March 5, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon starting to hear about. No iPhones. No iPads. The company called Apple was just “21st Century: Management of Head and Neck Cancers” beginning to show signs of actually surviving, instead of going bankrupt. Microsoft ruled the world. A google was still a mathematical number and nothing else. The 3 C.E. HOURS Motorola flip phones were the hottest thing going. Laptops were still rather heavy FEE: $50.00 Dentists/Auxiliary and clunky. Gateway made the best one and this guy named Dell was also starting to sell a few. Faculty from the James Graham Brown Cancer Center and the University of Louisville Schools of Dentistry and Medicine. By 1999, the room was even more crowded as the tech bubble boomed and every- thing with a “.com” at the end of it was going to make you richer than King Midas Co-Sponsored by: himself, right? The good times kept rolling and folks just kept buying technology The Kentucky Cancer Program The James Graham Brown Cancer Center 36 S a t u r d a y M a r c h 5

MR. DAVID BEYER DR. DEEPAK KRISHNAN TICKET #: SM10 TICKET #: SA12

Saturday, March 5, 2016 10:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Saturday, March 5, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. “New Board Rules for Continuing “Pearls and Pitfalls in Dental Surgery for Education Gathering and Other Tidbits the General Practitioner” of Information” Limited to 50 Participants 3 C.E. HOURS Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dentists/Auxiliary 1 C.E. HOUR FEE: $35.00 Objectives: Dentists/Auxiliary • Provide updates on the practice of dent-alveolar surgery • Provide practical tips on making dento-alveolar surgery easier Topics to be discussed: • Review of complications of dento-alveolar surgery and tips on how to avoid those • The new electronic system for reporting continuing education • Provide an update on practice of antibiotic therapy in dento-alveolar surgery • New initiatives for licensing dentists See his Bio on page 48. See his Bio on page 44.

DR. JUSTIN RAYBOULD DR. GEOFFREY BALL TICKET #: SA13 TICKET #: SA11 Saturday, March 5, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Saturday, March 5, 2016 Noon – 1:00 p.m. “Modern Kids Endodontics” “The Civilian Dentist’s Role in America’s Defense” 3 C.E. HOURS Limited to 50 Participants FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall Dentists/Auxiliary

A comprehensive review of endodontics as it relates to children. In the state of Ken- 1 C.E. HOUR tucky, 43% of children are enrolled in Medicaid, with many of these children finding it FEE: $35.00 difficult to receive endodontic management. Dentists/Auxiliary https://www.aap.org/en-us/Documents/federaladvocacy_medic- An interactive program guiding dentists to understand their roll in treating their aidfactsheet_kentucky.pdf patients that are members of the National Guard and Reserves. The program will provide an understanding of special risks that dental disease may cause Airmen, This course will cover endodontic management of the primary and permanent denti- Soldiers and Sailors in a deployed environment. Emphasis will be placed on accurately tion, management of the fearful child and the implications of an MCO-dominated assessing patients’ risk for developing dental problems over the next 12 months population as it relates to endodontics in pediatric dentistry. and completing the required paperwork. Going beyond the military, we will discuss special considerations for pilots. See his Bio on page 50.

See his Bio on page 44.

37 S a t u r d a y M a r c h 5

Dr. Demetra Antimisiaris – Polypharmacy: The Silent Syndrome

The impact of medication misadventure on the lives of our seniors and their caregiv- ers is substantial, yet often goes unrecognized. Typically, older adults live with polypharmacy to manage multiple chronic disease states and geriatric syndromes such as dizziness, incontinence and cognitive impairment. Polypharmacy layered on top of frailty and geriatric syndromes can be a formula for medication use disasters. In this scenario, even the addition of one simple over the counter problem can lead to a medical crisis and avoidable hospitalization. We will discuss the reasons why medica- tions can mimic disease, why medications behave differently in elders and processes by which hidden medication use hazards can be avoided. This session will help participants develop skills that facilitate identification of and management approaches DR. WILLIAM MICHAEL MANSFIELD, DR. DEE ANTIMISIARIS to medication-related problems in older adults. & DR. GUSTAVO OLIVEIRA TICKET #: SA14 Objectives: Participants will be able to: Saturday, March 5, 2016 1:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. • Describe the age-related changes in physiology that impact drug pharmacodynamics “The Boomers are Coming…Are You Ready? – Pearls and and pharmacokinetics. Principles for Effective Senior Adult Patient Care” • Explain the prescribing cascade and how it can lead to unnecessary adverse drug events. 3 C.E. HOURS • Identify global signs and symptoms of medication-related problems in older adults. FEE: $90.00 Dentists $70.00 Staff Dentists/Auxiliary See their Bios on pages 48, 44 & 49.

Dr. William Michael Mansfield – Understanding Older Adult Patients, the Oral/Systemic Connection and Effective Preventive Therapies for Senior Adults

This session will explore senior adult demographics, frailty and the physiology of aging. In addition, various connections that exist between oral health and systemic health will be discussed. Finally, proven preventive dental therapies and products that are available to help senior adults and their caregivers achieve and maintain good oral health will be highlighted.

Objectives: At the conclusion of this presentation, the participant should have an understanding of: • Senior adult demographics, frailty and the physiology of aging DR. GEORGE KUSHNER, DR. BRIAN SHUMWAY & • Connections/associations between oral health and various systemic conditions DR. BRUNO de AZEVEDO • Preventive dental therapies and products for older adults TICKET #: SA15

Dr. Gustavo Oliveira – Effective Glass Ionomer Utilization in Saturday, March 5, 2016 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Older Adults “I’ve Found This Lesion...Now What?”

How should I use Glass Ionomers? Which placement techniques work best? Should 2 C.E. HOURS FEE: $35.00 I add Glass Ionomer Cements to my restorative material armamentarium? What are Dentists/Auxiliary the best Glass Ionomer materials out there? Should I use what my rep is suggesting? This lecture will discuss a variety of aspects of Glass Ionomer Restorative materi- This session will be a two-hour clinical pathologic conference applicable to all mem- als that are part of our daily restorative practice. The continuous development of bers of the dental team. A series of clinical cases will be presented with the “thought new materials and different marketing approaches from the dental industry can make process” involved to establish the diagnosis and treatment. The program will be restorative selection process confusing. At the same time, locating the best evidence clinically-oriented, interactive and educational. on which to base decisions can be challenging and a difficult task to accomplish. The latest and best available evidence out there regarding Glass Ionomer materials and Objective #1 techniques will be presented to help your team formulate, together with the patient, Review clinical presentations of common oral and maxillofacial pathology conditions the best clinical decisions for various scenarios. that present in the dental office.

Objective #2 Objectives: Discuss common adjuncts to help establish the diagnosis of a pathologic condition 1. Learn indications and contraindications for the clinical applications of such as biopsy, radiographs (including panorex and CT scan) and laboratory tests. glass ionomer materials. 2. Understand the interaction between GI materials and the tooth structure. Objective #3 3. Better anticipate and recognize possible clinical problems related to incorrect Review treatment, both medical and surgical, of common oral pathology conditions. application of GI materials. See their Bios on pages 48, 51 & 45. 38 S u n d a y M a r c h 6

CPR CERTIFICATION PATTY BONASSO BYRD TICKET #: SU1 TICKET #: SU3

Sunday, March 6, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon Sunday, March 6, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon “Basic Life Support-BLS Healthcare Provider Training” “Recognizing Drug Abuse in Dental Patients and KASPER Update 2016” FEE: $100.00 Dentists/Auxiliary 3 C.E. HOURS FEE: $100.00 The Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation course will be conducted within the most recent Dentists/Auxiliary updated guidelines of the American Heart Association. This course is three hours and will include adult, child and infant CPR, foreign body airway obstruction and an AED Drug abuse is a major health problem in America and impacts every dental practice, as presentation. The instructors include a retired Firefighter who managed the CPR well as our families. Dental professionals can play a huge role in drug abuse identifica- Training Center for the entire city of Louisville and two respitory therapists. This tion, prevention and intervention. Emphasis will be placed on increasing your skills course, while remaining compliant to AHA standards, will include plenty of discus- and abilities to recognize the signs and symptoms of drug abuse, refer suspected drug sion concerning the science behind changes in CPR, based on the experience of our abusers for help and treat recovering patients in your practice. instructors. This course will also discuss the Kentucky All Scheduled Prescription Electronic Each participant will receive a two-year certification card and a manual the day of the Reporting System (KASPER), as well as current State and Federal regulations impor- class. tant to the prescribing of controlled substances by dentists licensed to practice in Kentucky. This course complies with the requirements of the Kentucky Board of Dentistry for dental hygienists for provisions stipulated in 201 KAR 8:560, for dental assistants for Kentucky Board of Dentistry Emergency Regulation for Continuing Education Re- provisions stipulated in 201 KAR 8:570 and for dentists for provisions stipulated in quirement (KASPER) See Page 11, No. 23, Section 10, a thru f. Dentists are required 201 KAR 8:530. to complete 3 hours of continuing education that relates to the use of the electronic monitory system, pain management or addiction disorders prior to renewing their license every renewal cycle.

DR. GEORGE KUSHNER At the conclusion of this course, the participant should TICKET #: SU2 understand: • The signs and symptoms of illegal drug use/abuse (oral, physical and psychological) Sunday, March 6, 2016 9:00 a.m. – Noon • Drug interactions with substances used during oral care “Medical Emergencies in the Dental Office” • Communication strategies when working with active or recovering patients • Resources available to support patients and dental professionals 3 C.E. HOURS • The use of the KASPER system and current State and Federal regulations FEE: $95.00 important to the prescribing of controlled substances by dentists licensed to practice Dentists/Auxiliary in Kentucky

See her Bio on page 45. Medical emergencies can and do occur in the dental office. With advances in the medical field, we, as dental practitioners, are seeing and treating a significant medically-compromised patient population as outpatients in our dental offices. For- tunately, most of the emergencies that occur are treated appropriately and there is little harm to the patient. However, improper management of these emergencies can have disastrous results. Likewise, proper management of the medical emergency is no guarantee of a successful outcome.

This course will review common medical emergencies and management of these problems. Clinical “pearls” will be discussed that can hopefully lessen the chances of these emergencies. This presentation should be applicable to all members of the dental office team.

This course is approved by the Kentucky Board of Dentistry and meets the require- ments for dental hygienists for provisions stipulated in 201 KAR 8:560E.

See his Bio on page 48.

39 C a l e n d a r o f E v e n t s Thursday, March 3, 2016 Friday, March 4, 2016

8:30 A.M. – 11:00 A.M. Leadership & Courage: An Exercise 8:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. Dr. Robert Henry in Self–Assessment “Hypertension and Hypotension: Sponsored by Procter & Gamble/ Common Problems and Simple Crest Oral B Solutions” Hyatt Hotel/Conference Theater

11:00 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. KDA Opening Session Mr. C. Paul Bowen Hyatt Hotel/Conference Theater “IV Sedation, Empowering Patients and Your Practice” 11:30 A.M. – 1:00 P.M. William Marcus Randall Memorial Luncheon/Awards 9:00 A.M. – 10:00 A.M. Dr. William J. Moorhead Presentation “Digital Dental Product Review” Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom North Limited to 50 Participants Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall 1:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Dr. Jeffrey Okeson Sponsored by WEAVE & Sikka Software “What Every Dental Professional

Needs to Know about TMD” All proceeds benefit the 9:00 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. John Boardman, Andy Reynolds, Kentucky Dental Foundation Brian Burton & Cameron Hamilton Hyatt Hotel/Conference Theater “Interactive Financial Goal Planning: An Introduction to Financial 4:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Kentucky Dental Foundation Coaching” Business Meeting Limited to 20 Participants Hyatt Hotel/Belmont 9:00 A.M. – NOON Patty Bonasso Byrd Friday, March 4, 2016 “OSHA and Infection Control in the Dental Office 2016” 7:30 A.M. – 5:00 P.M. Registration: Main Lobby Sponsored by the Kentucky Dental KY International Convention Center Laboratory Association 8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session Legislative Agenda & Workshop 9:00 A.M. – NOON Dr. Michael DiTolla Sign up for Key Contacts “The Modern Restorative Practice”

8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session 9:00 A.M. – 1:00 P.M. Angie Currans Component Workshop/Panel “Playing by the Rules: Submitting Share Experiences & Learn Best ‘Clean’ Claims” Practices 9:00 A.M. – 4:00 P.M. Dr. Jeremy Bewley & Dr. Brad Harmon 8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session “KYCADCAMp™” Medicaid Update Sponsored by Ivoclar Vivadent, KYCADCAM,

8:15 A.M. – 9:00 A.M. Breakout Session Sirona and Patterson Dental Corporation Multi-Dentist Practice Panel Share Experiences & Learn Best 9:00 A.M. – 5:00 P.M. Dr. Alex Fleury Practices “Restorative Endodontics: A Modern Standard of Care for Long-Term Success” 8:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M. Dr. Mark Murphy – Lecture and Hands-On Session “Incorporating Sleep Apnea into Limited to 50 Participants your Practice: From Getting Started Presented by Real World Endo® to Medical Billing” Sponsored by Brasseler and Carestream Dental Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory 9:00 A.M. – 6:30 P.M. Exhibit Hall Open 8:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. Dr. Ted Parks “It’s Time to Clean up Your Image: Better Radiographic Technique”

40 C a l e n d a r o f E v e n t s Friday, March 4, 2016 Friday, March 4, 2016

10:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. Mr. Craig Pickett 1:30 P.M. – 3:30 P.M. MaryAnn Gately “Gypsum and Model Work for “The Digital Restoration Revolution” Dental Professionals” Limited to 50 Participants Limited to 50 Participants Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall Sponsored by Henry Schein Dental and Sponsored by Whip Mix Planmeca USA

Noon – 1:00 P.M. Dr. Mark Murphy 2:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Jason Zib “Treating OSA in Your Practice” “SEO after Mobilegeddon: More Patients,

Limited to 50 Participants Less Panic” Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall Presented by Officite Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory

Noon – 2:00 P.M. KDA Past President’s Lunch 2:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Sue Demske Hyatt Hotel/Belmont “Getting the Most Out of Internal Marketing” Noon – 2:00 P.M. “Preventative Products Roundtable Presented by Paragon Management Luncheon” For Dental Hygienists Only 2:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Dr. Mark Murphy “Advanced Communication Skills for 1:00 P.M. – 2:00 P.M. Dr. George Kushner Dental Teams” “Bisphosphonates, Osteonecrosis of the Sponsored by ADL Dental Laboratory Jaws (ONJ) and Dentistry – Where Are We Now and What Do We Know?” 2:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. Dr. George Kushner 1:00 P.M. – 2:30 P.M. John Boardman, Andy Reynolds, “Complications in Dentistry” Gerald Psimer & Jerry Psimer “Dental Practice Transitions: How to 4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session Maximize the Value of Your Dental Legislative Agenda & Workshop Practice” Sign up for Key Contacts

1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Dr. Michael DiTolla 4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session “The Monolithic Revolution” Component Workshop/Panel Share Experiences & Learn Best Practices 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Dr. William Curtis “When Oral Appliances Don’t Work: Surgical Options for Sleep Apnea and a 4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session Potpourri of Major Maxillofacial Medicaid Update Reconstruction” 4:00 P.M. – 4:45 P.M. Breakout Session 1:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. “Everything You Need to Know Multi-Dentist Practice Panel about Implants” Share Experiences & Learn Best Practices

Dr. Ryan Clagett 4:30 P.M. – 6:30 P.M. Dr. Jeremy Bewley & Dr. Brad Harmon “Keys to Treatment Success – Clinical “Live Crown Placement with Immediate Pearls for Successful Diagnosis, Implant Provisional Crown Designed and and Periodontal Therapy as well as Tips Fabricated by CEREC” for Treatment Plan Presentation and Limited to 50 Participants Patient Psychology” Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall Sponsored by Ivoclar Vivadent, KYCADCAM, Dr. Kate VonLackum “New Treatment Modalities for Sirona and Patterson Dental Corporation Peri-Implantitis” 5:00 P.M. – 6:00 P.M. KDPAC Board Meeting Dr. William Morgan Hyatt Hotel/2nd Floor Boardroom “The Evolution of Implant Dentistry” 41 C a l e n d a r o f E v e n t s

Friday, March 4, 2016 Saturday, March 5, 2016

6:30 P.M. – 8:00 P.M. U of K Alumni Reception 8:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. Dr. Carla Rodriguez & Hyatt Hotel/Park Suite Dr. Brandon Stapleton “Less is More: Building Beauty on 6:30 P.M. – 8:00 P.M. U of L Alumni Reception a Shoestring Budget” Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom North 9:00 A.M. – 10:00 A.M. Dr. Katherine King 7:00 P.M. – 9:00 P.M. President’s Reception: A “Tips for Improved Success on the Homecoming Celebration for Board Licensure Examinations” New Dentists and Dental Students Limited to 50 Participants Sponsored by Delta Dental Plan of KY Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall FREE to New Dentists and Dental Students 9:00 A.M. – NOON Dr. Ken Rich & Dr. Jerry Caudill (New Dentists are those out of “Navigating Kentucky Medicaid 2016” dental school 10 years or less) $35.00 Members/Exhibitors 9:00 A.M. – NOON Mr. Jeffrey Sexton Price includes one drink ticket “18th Annual Economic & Investment $50.00 Non-Members Outlook: Back to Basics” Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom South 9:00 A.M. – NOON Cancer Symposium 9:30 P.M. - ??? New Dentist After Party “21st Century: Management of Off site Head and Neck Cancers” Co-Sponsored by: Saturday, March 5, 2016 The Kentucky Cancer Program The James Graham Brown Cancer Center 7:30 A.M. – 4:00 P.M. Registration: Main Lobby KY International Convention Center 9:00 A.M. – 4:00 P.M. Exhibit Hall Open

8:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M. G. Kent Mangelson 10:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. David Beyer “Improved Patient Care through “New Board Rules for Continuing Lawsuit Protection & Prevention Education Gathering and Other for Dentists” Tidbits of Information” Sponsored by the American Society for Limited to 50 Participants Asset Protection Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall

8:00 A.M. – 11:00 A.M. Dr. Timothy Donley Noon – 1:00 P.M. Dr. Geoffrey Ball “A Better Perio Debridement “The Civilian Dentist’s Role in Protocol: Step-by-Step Guide for America’s Defense” When to Treat, What to Use, Limited to 50 Participants How to Use It” Presented in the center of the Exhibit Hall

8:00 A.M. – 3:00 P.M. Susan Grammer Noon – 2:00 P.M. Table Clinic & Hobby Show “Radiation Safety for Dental Rear of the Exhibit Hall Auxiliaries” KY International Convention Center

8:30 A.M. – 11:30 A.M. Dr. Mark Nation 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Dr. Deepak Krishnan “Implants: Developing the Optimal “Pearls and Pitfalls in Dental Surgery Treatment Plan - What is Trending for the General Practitioner” Today for Partially and Fully Edentulous Patients with 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Dr. Justin Raybould Considerations of Time, Space “Modern Kids Endodontics” and Money”

42 C a l e n d a r o f E v e n t s

Saturday, March 5, 2016 University of Louisville Friday, March 4, 2016 1:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. “The Boomers are Coming... 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. University of Louisville Are You Ready? Pearls and Principles for Alumni Reception Effective Senior Adult Patient Care Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom North

Dr. William Michael Mansfield University of Kentucky “Understanding Older Adult Patients, Friday, March 4, 2016 the Oral/Systemic Connection and 6:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m. University of Kentucky Effective Preventive Therapies for Alumni Reception Senior Adults” Hyatt Hotel/Park Suite Alliance of the KDA Luncheon Dr. Gustavo Oliveira Friday, March 4, 2016 “Effective Glass Ionomer Utilization in Noon Luncheon Older Adults” For Reservations contact Harriet Allen at (502) 897-5044 or (502) 553-1698 Dr. Demetra Antimisiaris by February 24, 2016 “Polypharmacy: The Silent Syndrome” Hyatt Hotel/Aqueduct

2:00 P.M. – 2:30 P.M. General Assembly/Election of Officers F.I.C.D./F.A.C.D./Pierre Fauchard Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom North Saturday, March 5, 2016 7:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. FICD/FACD Business Meeting/Breakfast 2:00 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. Dr. George Kushner, Note: FICD will meet Dr. Brian Shumway & from 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. and Dr. Bruno de Azevedo FACD will meet “I’ve Found This Lesion…Now What?” from 10:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m. Breakfast & Awards will be 2:30 P.M. – 4:00 P.M. First Meeting of the House of Delegates from 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom North Hyatt Hotel/Keeneland

Immediately Following the KDPAC Annual Meeting Kentucky Dental Foundation House of Delegates Hyatt Hotel/Regency Ballroom North Thursday, March 3, 2016 4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Business Meeting Hyatt Hotel/Belmont 4:00 P.M. Reference Committee Meetings (4:00 p.m. or immediately following the Kentucky Dental Assistants Association House of Delegates meeting) Friday, March 4, 2016 Hyatt Hotel/Cherokee/ 7:00 p.m. Executive Board Meeting Iroqouis-Shawnee/Seneca Hyatt Hotel

Sunday, March 6, 2016 Kentucky Academy of General Dentistry Friday, March 4, 2016 9:00 A.M. – NOON CPR Certification 4:45 p.m. - 7:00 p.m. KYAGD Master & Fellow Reception “Basic Life Support-BLS Healthcare All Dentists Are Invited Provider Training” Hyatt Hotel/Kentucky Suite

9:00 A.M. - NOON Dr. George Kushner Kentucky Department for Public Health “Medical Emergencies in the Dental Office” Saturday, March 5, 2016 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. Boards of Health 9:00 A.M. – NOON Patty Bonasso Byrd Dentists Luncheon “Recognizing Drug Abuse in Dental Patients and KASPER Update 2016”

10:30 A.M. – Noon Second Meeting of the House of Delegates Hyatt Hotel/Conference Theater 43 2016 Speaker Bios

Dr. Demetra Antimisiaris earned her From 1981 to 1985, Mr. David Beyer Doctor of Pharmacy degree at the University of was an Associate in the Louisville Law the Pacific (California) and completed a Geriatric Firm of Nold, Mosley, Clare, Hubbard and Clinical pharmacy residency at VAMC-West LA- Townes. In 1985, he joined the Federal UCLA. She is a Certified Geriatric Pharmacist Bureau of Investigation (FBI). After four and her research interests include decision making months of training at the FBI Academy regarding medication use and health systems root in Quantico, Virginia, he was transferred cause analysis regarding medication outcomes. She’s to the Oklahoma City Office of the FBI an Associate Professor at the University of Louisville where he was assigned to a White Collar Departments of Pharmacology and Toxicology and Crime Squad. In 1989, he was promoted Family & Geriatric Medicine where she teaches pharmacology, as well as to Supervisor and transferred to FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C., provides education and precepting for post grad training programs on where he served in the Legal Counsel Division for two years and, later, medication management topics. two years in the Undercover and Sensitive Operations Unit.

Dr. Dee as she’s called, leads the U of L “Polypharmacy and Medication In 1993, he was selected as the Chief Division Counsel of the Kentucky Management Program” which is an endowed program, unique amongst Office of the FBI. As Chief Division Counsel, he was responsible for medical schools in the United States, dedicated exclusively to fighting all legal and ethics matters including resolution of complex legal issues the problem of polypharmacy through education, research and outreach. arising from investigations, sensitive personnel issues and oversight of Dissemination of medication management skills is a primary mission of civil litigation. Mr. Beyer also served as the supervisor of the informant, the Polypharmacy and Medication Management Program. Dr. Dee has undercover and forfeiture programs as well as spokesperson for the FBI. authored numerous CE courses, live sessions for national symposia and a book chapter -”Polypharmacy” in the 4th edition of Gerontological Mr. Beyer has been a speaker at the FBI Academy on the topics of Nursing by Kris Mauk (Valparaiso). She serves on the ASCP (American Undercover Operations and Electronic Surveillance. He has also been Society of Consultant Pharmacist) Educational Leadership Committee a guest instructor at the International Law Enforcement Academy in and was recently recognized for outstanding service in education by the Budapest, Hungary as well as an instructor at an international training ASCP. initiative sponsored by the U.S. State Department in Kristinau, Moldova and Bucharest, Romania. Mr. Beyer has been an instructor at various law Dr. Geoffrey Ball is a practicing general dentist enforcement conferences and training seminars throughout Kentucky. who serves on the weekends for the Kentucky Air National Guard (KYANG) and was active Air In 1999, Mr. Beyer was awarded the U.S. Attorney Award for Public Force from 2003-2008. His primary duty for the Service for his development of a witness protection plan for the Western KYANG was to ensure the readiness of Kentucky District of Kentucky. Guardsmen to serve at a moment’s notice. During his service he has seen first-hand the problems that Mr. Beyer retired from the FBI on November 30, 2011 and began serving can result from members that deploy. Dr. Ball is a as the General Counsel for the Kentucky Board of Dentistry (KBD). In 2002 graduate of the University of Louisville School August of 2012, he was appointed as the Interim Executive Director of of Dentistry. He completed an AEGD at University the KBD. of Louisville 2003 and a GPR program at University of Kentucky in 2009. He received his Mastership from the Academy of General Dentistry in John Boardman, CFP® is a Financial 2015 and is currently the President of the Kentucky Academy of General Advocate and CEO at Ballast, Inc., an Dentistry and an Alternate Delegate to the KDA House of Delegates. independent, locally-owned financial planning firm in Kentucky. He is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL Dr. Jeremy Bewley is a Diplomate, PLANNERTM practitioner, graduate of Centre International Congress of Oral Implantologist; he College, and a graduate of the Cannon Financial received his DMD from the University of Louisville Institute of Investment Management and Personal in 2007, has a B.S. in Biology and a B.A. in Psychology Trust School. John works with many families from Spalding University. Dr. Bewley is a member in and small business owners to help coordinate good standing with the American Dental Association, and manage all aspects of their financial life. John KY Dental Association, Louisville Dental Society and is a Board Member of the First Tee Organization in Lexington and the the Academy of General Dentistry. Dr. Bewley is Bluegrass Estate Planning Council, Chairman of the American Cancer also a member of the Misch International Implant Society Hope Lodge of Lexington Board, and past Board Member of the Institute, a CEREC Mentor with www.cerecdoctors. Centre College Alumni Advisory and Lexington Boards. This is his fifth com, a KYCADCAM and Patterson Trainer and a Sirona and Ivoclar Beta year speaking at the Kentucky Dental Association’s Annual Meeting. Tester.

44 2016 Speaker Bios

C. Paul Bowen, CRNA, MSN graduated with a Dr. Jerry Caudill is the Kentucky State Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Dental Director for Avēsis, Incorporated. Avēsis Florida, College of Nursing in 1994. He practiced administers the dental benefits for four of cardio-thoracic critical care nursing at Shands Kentucky’s five MCOs. He is a Fellow and Master Hospital at the University of Florida for eight years of the Academy of General Dentistry and a 1982 and for four years at Kosair Children’s Hospital, graduate of the UK College of Dentistry. Prior to Louisville, Kentucky. In 2003, he took the position returning to Kentucky, he was in full-time private of Chief Research Clinical Coordinator for the practice and a commercial and government University of Louisville Pediatric Pharmacology dental claims consultant and reviewer. He is a Research Unit at Kosair Children’s Hospital. In board examiner for the Council of Interstate 2008, Paul graduated from Texas Wesleyan Graduate Testing Agencies (CITA Board) which administers the ADEX Board School of Nurse Anesthesia, Fort Worth, Texas where he earned a exam recognized in 46 states and territories, including Kentucky. Dr. Master’s of Science in Nurse Anesthesia. Caudill practiced in rural Kentucky, Tennessee and North Carolina and participated in treating Medicaid patients. Dr. Caudill also practiced Currently, Paul practices anesthesia at University of Louisville Hospital seven years in Dubai, UAE and Kuwait. He was the National Dental and occasionally practices at all Norton Healthcare facilities, Harrison Director of a multi-state, 120-office DSO and Advisor to the Academy of County Hospital and Baptist Hospital Madisonville. In addition to his General Dentistry National Taskforce on Corporate Dentistry. He was hospital practice, Paul began his own anesthesia company, DentTIVA®, the 2012 President of the North Carolina AGD and is a member of the in 2011. The DentTIVA® mission is to help more patients who fear American Association of Dental Consultants, AGD, ADEA and is board dental-related experiences by providing greater access to IV sedation eligible in the International Association for Orthodontics. In 1989, Dr. and general anesthesia in the dental office. His goal is also to optimize Caudill was among the first general dentists licensed in general anesthesia affordability and efficacy for patients and improve the bottom line for & conscious sedation in Kentucky. dentists and oral surgeons. Dr. Ryan Clagett graduated from the Patty Bonasso Byrd, RDH, BS is currently University of Louisville in 2003 and completed co-director of Infection Control at the University his Periodontal Residency at the University of Louisville School of Dentistry as well as in private of Louisville in 2006. He has been in a solo practice. private practice in Elizabethtown, KY since 2006. Board Certified by the American Board In dental hygiene since 1978, Patty is a graduate of of Periodontology, Dr. Clagett has lectured to the University of Louisville Dental Hygiene Program. both, local and international audiences on various She received her BS in Occupational Training and aspects of periodontal and implant therapy as well Development in 2002. She is an active member of as practice management. He is an officer of the Southern Academy of the American Dental Hygienists’ Association as well Periodontology, a Past President of the Kentucky Society of Periodontists as past president of KDHA. and an active member of the American Academy of Periodontology and North American Society of Periodontists. Having an accomplished background in several dental hygiene arenas, such as clinician, national speaker, corporate educator, faculty, sales and Dr. Bruno Correa de Azevedo, DDS, author, she brings a wealth of experience and knowledge to her courses. MS is a Diplomate, American Board of Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology and an Assistant Professor, Brian Burton is a Financial Advocate and Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology at the University Director of Portfolio Strategy at Ballast, Inc. Brian of Louisville School of Dentistry in Louisville, is a Georgetown College graduate and earned a Kentucky. Certification of Financial Planning from Kaplan University. Brian oversees recommendations for portfolio strategy and direction at Ballast, while also working with a select group of households. With over a decade of managing $200+ million of Angie Currans is the founder of AR Pro. She aggregated client assets, Brian’s expertise creates has enjoyed many aspects of the dental field over significant value to Ballast and to the clients he works the past 20+ years. Account Receivables (AR) is with directly. Brian is a Board Member and Treasurer for the Kentucky her passion and primary focus. She has worked Humanities Council and Bluegrass Crime Stoppers. with more than 75 offices, providing AR training, clean up or audits. She is passionate about helping practices improve profitability by improving their Accounts Receivables. Angie is proud to be a member of the Speaking Consulting Network & Directory of Dental Speakers. 45 2016 Speaker Bios

Dr. William J. Curtis received his dental and helps a day of education become much more pleasant. He medicine degree from the University of Nevada, Las uses live clinical video in his presentations to reinforce the learning and Vegas School of Dental Medicine. He received his increase retention of the techniques. medical degree and completed his residency training in Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the University of Timothy Donley, DDS MSD is currently Texas Health Science Center in Houston. He then in the private practice of Periodontics and completed fellowships in Head and Neck Oncology Implantology in Bowling Green, KY. After and Microvascular Reconstruction at the University of graduating from the University of Notre Dame, Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor and in Pediatric Georgetown University School of Dentistry Craniomaxillofacial Surgery at the Charleston Area and completing a general practice residency, he Medical Center in Charleston, W.Va. practiced general dentistry. He then returned to Indiana University where he received his William enjoys a broad scope of practice, treating conditions of the head Masters Degree in Periodontics. Dr. Donley is and neck with a particular interest in head and neck cancer, complex the former editor of the Journal of the Kentucky facial reconstruction and pediatric deformities, including cleft lip and Dental Association and is an adjunct professor of Periodontics at Western palate. Kentucky University. He is a lecturer with the ADA Seminar Series. He has lectured world-wide. Dentistry Today recently listed him among its Sue Demske is a Senior Consultant at Paragon Leaders in Continuing Education. He lectures and publishes frequently Management Associates, a Practice Management firm on topics of interest to clinical dentists and hygienists. specializing in dentistry. She graduated from Hudson Valley Community College with her Dental Hygiene Dr. Alex Fleury received his Masters of Degree and University of Maryland at Baltimore Science Degree in Oral Biology and Certificate in with her Dental Degree Completion and Business Endodontics from the University of Pennsylvania Degree. Sue has worked clinical and managerial School of Dental Medicine. He received his positions with dental practices for over 40 years. DDS Degree in 1984 from the University Sue has been consulting for the past 25 years and of São Paulo. Dr. Fleury served as Director has facilitated and guided over 500 dental offices to of Predoctoral Endodontics for six years at create a dynamic collaboration, based on excellence and ethics, between both, Nova Southeastern University School of the dental team and the dental patient. Dental Medicine in Florida and Baylor College of Dentistry. He currently serves as Assistant She works with practices that produce values of $500,000 to Professor at Baylor College of Dentistry, working with Endodontic $10,000,000 and knows that there is no cookie-cutter approach to Residents. Of particular pride is being named the recipient of the practice success. Her vast knowledge of what works and what doesn’t “Edward E. Osetek Award” for best new Endodontic Educator of the depending on community awareness and doctor philosophy will help you year by the American Association of Endodontists. In addition, Dr. take your practice to the new goal you wish to attain. Fleury is honored to have been the recipient of the “Richard F. Weiss Achievement Award” presented by the Louis I. Grossman Study Club Dr. Michael DiTolla graduated from the (University of Pennsylvania). He also served on the Scientific Advisory University of the Pacific School of Dentistry in 1988. Board of the Journal of Endodontics, and as well serves as the Director of He was awarded his Fellowship in the Academy of Educational Resources for Real World Endodontics. Dr. Fleury is currently General Dentistry in 1995. He is a graduate of the in the full-time private practice of Endodontics in Dallas, Texas. Las Vegas Institute of Cosmetic Dentistry and is also a clinical evaluator for CRA. From 2001 – 2006, he MaryAnn Gately is a District Sales Manager was an Instructor for PAC-Live’s Live Patient Hands- for Planmeca USA, Digital Dentistry Division. on Veneer Course. In 2001, he became Director of MaryAnn has over 20 years of experience in Clinical Research and Education at Glidewell Labs. dentistry and 13 years of experience and training Dr. DiTolla is a featured speaker for Dr. Gordon in CAD/CAM dentistry. Her responsibilities Christensen’s Dentistry Update. have extended from chairside, treatment plan coordinator, marketing and office manager. She While writing for several journals, Dr. DiTolla has a monthly column is best known as a talented CDD (Certified in on restorative dentistry in Dental Economics and is a contributing editor Digital Dentistry) in the Hampton Roads area of for Contemporary Esthetics and Restorative Practice. Dr. DiTolla helped Virginia, where she has been a Henry Schein E4D launch Chairside Magazine and is the Clinical Editor of this quarterly Consultant in Digital Dentistry, lecturing and training dental teams on publication that frequently presents his own clinical case studies. digital and CAD/CAM solutions.

Referred to as one of dentistry’s most entertaining speakers, Dr. MaryAnn has worked with the University of Kentucky and University DiTolla’s blend of humor and entertainment keeps attendees awake of Louisville Dental Schools on training and integration of Planmeca

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PlanFit digital solutions and continues to train private practices Dr. Harmon is passionate about giving his patients healthy, beautiful in implementation of digital solutions and marketing strategies to smiles for a lifetime. His goal is to treat all of his patients as he would differentiate the digital dental practice. his own family with the utmost respect and highest level of customer service. In addition, Dr. Harmon regularly attends continuing education Susan Grammer graduated from the University courses in order to ensure he is able to offer his patients the latest of Louisville from the Dental Hygiene Program. dentistry has to offer. Dr. Harmon is currently a member of the She received her Master’s in Education and taught American Dental Association, Kentucky Dental Association, Louisville at the University of Kentucky in an experimental Dental Society, Academy of General Dentistry, American Academy of Dental Hygiene Program that was based in Ashland, Cosmetic Dentistry, American Academy of Implant Dentistry, and the Kentucky. At the end of that year, she accepted East End Study Club. a position teaching at the University of Louisville School of Dentistry in the Expanded Duty Dental In his free time, Dr. Harmon enjoys running, friends, and spending time Assisting Program. with his wife, Shellie, and their five children.

After teaching in the Dental Assisting Program, Ms. Grammer taught in Robert G. Henry, DMD, MPH is the Chief the Dental Hygiene Program until last year. She is now teaching in the of Dentistry at the Department of Veterans Radiology Department at the University of Louisville School of Dentistry Affairs Medical Center in Lexington, Kentucky. and is currently Associate Professor in the Department of Oral Health He is also a Clinical Associate Professor at the and Rehabilitation. University of Kentucky College of Dentistry, a research Associate at the Sanders-Brown Ms. Grammer teaches all of the radiology courses in the Dental Hygiene Center on Aging and the former Director for Program, is co-course director of the DMD freshman Radiology course Geriatric Dentistry for the Department of Public and teaches the laboratory and clinical portion of the DMD Radiology Health Dentistry for the State of Kentucky. courses. She has also given numerous continuing education courses in He is past president of the American Society Radiation Safety. of Geriatric Dentistry, past Chairman of the Board for the Special Care Dentistry Association, past president of Cameron Hamilton, MBA is a Financial Special Care Advocates in Dentistry and founding board member for Advocate and Director of Financial Planning at Ballast, Mission Lexington, a non-profit organization devoted to providing Inc. Cameron attended the University of Kentucky medical and dental care to persons in the community who are unable for undergrad and earned his MBA from UK’s Gatton to afford care. His professional interests include treating patients with College of Business and Economics. Cameron’s neurological diseases, including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease fundamental understanding of comprehensive financial and stroke. He has written and spoken on management of patients with planning strategies, along with his enjoyment of numerous medical conditions, including bleeding disorders and those analytical analysis helps create well designed and requiring sedation to be managed. He holds fellowships in the American thoughtful comprehensive financial plans for his Association of Hospital Dentistry, the American Society of Geriatric clients. Acting as a client’s Personal CFO, Cameron Dentistry and the American Dental Society of Anesthesia. integrates the plans he designs into their life, coordinating and managing all aspects of the plan. In the community, he Dr. Katherine King graduated from is a member of the Bluegrass Estate Planning Council. Cameron is also Transylvania University in 1978 and then the very passionate about Alzheimer’s research, founding Bike4Alz, a cross- University of Kentucky College of Dentistry in country bike ride that raising funds for the Alzheimer’s Association and 1982. She returned home to Somerset, Kentucky participating in the National Alzheimer’s Advocacy Forum. to practice with her father, Dr. B.E. King and took over his practice upon his death. Dr. Bradley Harmon graduated from Cumberland College in 1995 with a Bachelor’s She has practiced General Dentistry for the past degree in Mathematics and went on to teach junior 33 years. In addition she served for six years on high and high school before joining the United the Kentucky Board of Dentistry, serving on their States Army Reserves. In the Reserves, Dr. Harmon legislative and law enforcement committees. She served four years on received training as a dental assistant and worked the Governor’s Kentucky All Schedule Prescribing and Reporting Task closely with dentists in a Medical Support Unit in Force (KASPER). She has acted as a clinical examiner for four regional Louisville. He was so impressed with the advances testing agencies, The Southern Regional Testing Agency, The Council being made in dental technology that he decided to of Interstate Testing Agency, The Commission on Dental Competency pursue a career as a dentist. In 2005, Dr. Harmon Assessments (formerly the NERB) and The Central Regional Dental graduated with his DDS (Doctor of Dental Surgery) Testing Agency. Dr. King has traveled extensively throughout the US with Honors from The Ohio State University after serving on active duty and its territories conducting Clinical Licensure examinations for both in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Dental and Hygiene programs.

47 2016 Speaker Bios

Dr. Deepak Krishnan is an American Dr. W. Michael Mansfield practiced Board certified Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon and general dentistry for over four years in the Residency Program Director at University of Louisville, Kentucky before joining the Whip Cincinnati’s advanced training program in Oral & Mix Corporation in 1987 where he served as Maxillofacial Surgery. He is an associate professor of a technical representative and then Manager of Surgery at the College of Medicine at University of Professional Relations. In 2001, Dr. Mansfield Cincinnati, where he teaches and practices. left Whip Mix to join the faculty of the University of Louisville School of Dentistry as a Lecturer. Deepak obtained his dental degree from Bangalore At the ULSD, he served as the Director of University, India and pursued formal training in Continuing Education from 2003-2010, is currently Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery in Emory University’s an Assistant Professor in the Department of College of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia. Upon completion of the General Dentistry and Oral Medicine and has developed and is Director residency, Deepak pursued further fellowship training in Oral & of a course emphasizing Inter-professional Geriatric Dental Education Maxillofacial Surgery focusing on orthognathic surgery at Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada. titled: “A Multidisciplinary Approach to Geriatric Dentistry”.

Deepak’s clinical interests are in Orthognathic and reconstructive Dr. Mansfield completed the University of at Birmingham surgery, maxillofacial trauma, pediatric maxillofacial surgery, ambulatory Geriatric Education Center Faculty Scholars Program as a member of the anesthesia and clinical research and Simulation in surgical education. 2013-2014 cohort. In 2014, he was appointed to serve on the Institute for Aging which operates in partnership with the Kentucky Department He currently serves on the Committee on Anesthesia and Special for Aging and Independent Living. Dr. Mansfield is a 1977 graduate Committee for Clinical Research of the AAOMS and is the chairman of Transylvania University and a 1982 graduate of the University of of the Trainee Section of the International Association of Oral and Louisville School of Dentistry. He is a member of several professional Maxillofacial Surgeons. He is the president of the Ohio Dental Society organizations including; the Louisville Dental Society, Kentucky Dental of Anesthesia and the president-elect of the Ohio State Oral and Association, American Dental Association, Academy of Operative Maxillofacial Surgeons. Dentistry and the Kentucky Oral Health Coalition. Dr. George Kushner is a graduate of Temple William J. Moorhead, DMD has practiced University School of Dentistry. Dr. Kushner family and sedation dentistry in Flemingsburg, received his medical degree from the University Kentucky for over 30 years. Dr. Moorhead is a of Alabama School of Medicine. He completed graduate of the University of Louisville, where his Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery residency at the he was a member of the Phi Delta Prosthetic University of Louisville. Currently, Dr. Kushner is Honor Fraternity. Professor of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery at the University of Louisville. He is the Director of the Dr. Moorhead has served as President of the Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery Residency program. Kentucky Dental Association, Chair of the KDA Dr. Kushner is the author of several publications Executive Board and President of the Blue Grass and articles and lectures extensively throughout the Dental Society. country. He maintains a faculty practice in oral and maxillofacial surgery through the University of Louisville School of Dentistry. Dr. Moorhead has received Fellowships from the Dental Organization for Conscious Sedation, the Pierre Fauchard Academy and the International G. Kent Mangelson, CFP, Author, Senior College of Dentists. He is a member of the Crown Council, American Advisor is the author of several books including: Dental Society of Anesthesiology, Dental Organization for Conscious Protect Your Assets, The Asset Protection Bible, America’s Sedation, American Dental Association, Kentucky Dental Association and Greatest Tax Secrets Revealed, and Estate Planning Made the Blue Grass Dental Society. Easy. He has presented at hundreds of conventions, conferences and seminars across the country with excellent reviews. He has over three decades of experience as a senior advisor with clients in all fifty states. His career has been credited with saving clients over one hundred million dollars. G.K. is one of the nation’s top speakers and has shared the stage with U.S. Presidents Reagan, Ford, Clinton and Bush as well as Zig Ziglar, Margaret Thatcher, Colin Powell and Donald Trump.

48 2016 Speaker Bios

William J. Morgan, DMD trained at the University of Kentucky chapters. Dr. Okeson is a very sought after lecturer on the subject College of Dentistry. He received his dental degree in 1972 and his of TMD and orofacial pain and has presented more than 1,100 invited certificate in periodontics in December 1973. He is a life member of lectures on the subject of TMD and orofacial pain in all 50 states and in the American Dental Association and is also an active life member of the 54 different countries. He has received the campus-wide University of American Academy of Periodontics. Dr. Morgan is a Diplomate of the Kentucky “Great Teacher Award”, the Provost’s Distinguished Service American Board of Periodontics (1982). He practiced general dentistry Professorship, the American Academy of Orofacial Pain’s Service Award for five years in Cincinnati, Ohio and has been in a private practice and the first ever “Distinguished Alumni Award” from the College of limited to periodontics in Richmond, Kentucky since 1982. Dr. Morgan Dentistry. Dr. Okeson has also received “The International Dentist of has been involved in implant dentistry since 1986. the Year Award” from the Academy of Dentistry International. This is the highest award recognized by this Academy and was given to him in Dr. Mark Murphy is the Principal of recognition of his worldwide efforts in providing education in the area of Funktional Tracker and Lead Faculty for Clinical temporomandibular disorders and orofacial pain. Education at Microdental. He also serves on the Adjunct Faculty at the University of Detroit Mercy Dr. Gustavo Oliveira is an Assistant and the Pankey Institute, where he also served Professor in the Department of General on the Board of Directors. He practices general Dentistry and Oral Medicine at the University dentistry on a limited basis in Rochester, Michigan of Louisville (UofL), Kentucky. He received his and lectures internationally on Leadership, Practice DDS degree from the Federal University of Santa Management, Communication, Case Acceptance, Catarina (UFSC), Brazil and a Master’s degree Planning, Occlusion and TMD. He is an informative from the University of North Carolina at Chapel and entertaining speaker, blending a stand-up style Hill (UNC). Dr. Oliveira has a Certificate in of humor and anecdotes with current evidence- Operative Dentistry from UNC and completed based research that you can take home and use in your practice right a clinical fellowship in the Department of away. Operative Dentistry at the same institution.

Dr. Mark Nation attended the University of Dr. Oliveira is a member of various professional organizations, including Louisville to obtain an undergraduate degree in the American Dental Association, the International Association for Biology. He completed his dental training from the Dental Research and the Academy of Operative Dentistry. He has University of Louisville in 2000. He was chosen as published many scientific papers and serves as a manuscript reviewer ULSD Most Outstanding Graduate in 2000; won for several scientific publications. He is actively involved in research, the Pierre Fauchard award for dental excellence particularly in the fields of Operative Dentistry, Dental Materials and and was also given the ACP award for outstanding Esthetic Dentistry. Dr. Oliveira maintains a part-time intramural practice achievement in Prosthodontic education. Dr. dedicated to restorative, implant and esthetic dentistry. Nation graduated from the Advanced Graduate Residency Program in Prosthodontics in Dr. Edwin T. Parks received his DMD from 2003. Dr. Nation has extensive experience in the University of Kentucky College of Dentistry implant prosthetics and surgery. He has given numerous lectures and and his MS in Dental Diagnostic Sciences from CE courses concerning diagnostics, treatment planning, full mouth Indiana University School of Dentistry. He is reconstruction, implant prosthodontics, implant surgical procedures, currently a Professor of Diagnostic Sciences in provisionals, sleep prosthodontics, airway and occlusion. He received the Department of Oral Pathology, Medicine his certification for Parenteral Conscious Sedation in May 2010. He is and Radiology at Indiana University School of a founding member of Renew Institute: Beyond Dentistry. Dr. Nation Dentistry. Dr. Parks is the division director is a member of the American College of Prosthodontists (ACP), the for Oral and Maxillofacial Radiology. He is a flagship organization for the ADA dental specialty of Prosthodontics, Diplomate of the American Board of Oral and Academy of Osseointegration (AO), American Dental Association and Maxillofacial Radiology and the American Board of Oral Medicine. Dr. the International Congress of Oral Implantologists (ICOI). Parks has presented over 100 continuing education courses and authored numerous journal articles and book chapters. Dr. Parks currently serves Dr. Jeffrey Okeson is Professor, Chairman on the NCRP 145 rewrite committee. of the Department of Oral Health Science at the University of Kentucky and Director of the College’s Orofacial Pain Center, which he established in 1977. He has authored three textbooks on TM disorders and orofacial pain that are presently used in most US dental schools and have been translated into eleven different languages. He has also published more than 220 articles and

49 2016 Speaker Bios

Craig A. Pickett, AA, RG, CDT, TE is board Dr. William (Ken) Rich, DMD, CDC, certified in Crown & Bridge by the National Board FICD, FACD, lives in Grant County, Kentucky for Certification with Technologist designation; is where he began practicing dentistry in 1975, a Recognized Graduate of Diablo Valley College in right after his graduation from the University Dental Technology and attended Brigham Young of Louisville Dental School and continues University in Pre-Dental. Prior to his position to practice, along with his two sons. He is as Dental Technical Support Manager at Whip the Dental Medicaid Director of the state Mix Corporation, he managed in large and small of Kentucky, serves as the Chair of the Crown & Bridge/Ceramic laboratories and owned Dental Quality Alliance (DQA), Member PICKETT FABRICATION in California. He also of the American Association of Dental represented Jelenko, Whaledent and Dentsply CONSULTANTS, and as the Chair of the Medicaid and SCHIP State as a Technical Sales Representative. As a 30-year CDT, and trained in Dental Directors Association (MSDA). He is a founding board member 3Shape and Roland milling, he is now responsible for analog and digital of the U S National Oral Health Alliance, a former trustee of the ADA, technical support to optimize product performance for customers. He and former president of the Kentucky Dental Association. assists in developing and evaluating new products and represents Whip Mix by presenting technical clinics in the US and Internationally. He is Dr. Carla Rodriguez graduated from the recipient of the 2014 National Association of Dental Laboratories UKCD in 1981 and moved to Jackson, Kentucky Excellence in Education Award. where she opened a solo general family practice. Along with her husband, she raised Dr. Justin Raybould graduated from the their daughter and was active in professional, University of Kentucky College of Dentistry in educational, recreational and civic organizations, 2009. As an Air Force dentist, he completed including KDA Medicaid advisory committees. an Advanced Education in General Dentistry (AEGD) residency at Bolling Air Force Base in As research and development of resin Washington, D.C. in 2010, followed by three composite advanced, Carla found her dental years serving as a dentist at the Pentagon. Dr. niche. This avid craftsperson used her artistic Raybould also spent seven months in Kabul, perception and skill to begin expanding her practice into one focusing Afghanistan building a dental clinic and treating on esthetics. This perspective spilled over into all areas of restorative service members from around the world. For dentistry: direct, fixed and removable. But by far, the area to which she his service in Afghanistan, he received the Defense Meritorious Service was most called to practice was direct composite resin. Medal. Dr. Rodriguez studied the material and implemented advanced In 2013, Dr. Raybould returned to Lexington to complete his residency techniques to enhance her practice. Finding it both, personally and in Pediatric Dentistry at UK. Happy to be back in the Bluegrass, he financially rewarding, she continued her practice until 2014 when she decided to develop a practice that combined his love for the Lexington accepted a full-time faculty position at UKCD where she directs the community, public service, fine arts and children: Modern Kids Dentistry. Operative Dentistry course.

Andy Reynolds, CFP®, MBA is a Financial Mr. Jeffrey A. Sexton returns to the Advocate and COO at Ballast, Inc., an independent, annual meeting for the 18th year to provide locally-owned financial planning firm in Kentucky. He an educational and highly useful session for is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM practitioner members. He is the President and Chief and graduate of Centre College and the University Investment Officer of Silver Leaf Capital, LLC, of Kentucky’s MBA program. Andy works with an investment firm located in New York City, small business owners to help create, implement where he is also the Portfolio Manager primarily and monitor comprehensive plans seeking to identify responsible for the day-to-day management of and meet specific financial goals. Andy is a Kentucky a market neutral long-short equity hedge fund Colonel, Advisor Committee Member at the Blue based in part on his own academic research Grass Community Foundation, Bluegrass Estate on momentum he conducted while at the Planning Council Member and OperaLex Board Member. This is his fifth University of under the direct tutelage year speaking at the Kentucky Dental Association’s Annual Meeting. of Professor Eugene Fama, the 2013 recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economic Science. Mr. Sexton earned an M.B.A. at the University of Chicago; an M.A. in Economic Statecraft from the University of Kentucky; a J.D. from the University of Louisville; and, a B.S. in Accounting from the University of Kentucky. Mr. Sexton is a Certified Investment Management Analyst, and member of the Louisville, the Kentucky and the American Bar Associations.

50 2016 Speaker Bios

Dr. Brian Shumway is an assistant professor Congress of Oral Implantology (ICOI), a non-profit continuing education of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology at the University organization committed towards development, research and advanced of Louisville, School of Dentistry. He received his training in the field of implant dentistry. In addition to serving patients dental degree from The Ohio State University in in her solo specialty practice, Modern Periodontics in Lexington, KY, she 2003, followed by one year of advanced education teaches didactic classes and clinical patient care one day a week at the in general dentistry at the Veteran’s Affairs Audie University of Kentucky College of Dentistry. L. Murphy Memorial Hospital in San Antonio, TX. He then completed a residency in Oral and Jason Zib is a dedicated Web Presence Maxillofacial Pathology and Master’s Degree at The Advisor that has spent the last six years helping Ohio State University. He is a Diplomate of the dentists build online success. In his spare time, American Board of Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology he enjoys fishing, hiking, camping and spending and a Fellow of the American Academy of Oral and Maxillofacial time with his wife and two sons, Charlie and Pathology. He has an active clinical practice specializing in diagnosis Henry. and management of oral diseases and participates in the University of Louisville oral pathology biopsy service. In collaboration with The Ohio State University and University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, he and Dr. Kushner are engaged in a clinical trial focused on using freeze-dried black raspberries to treat oral epithelial dysplasia, a precursor to oral cancer.

Dr. Brandon Stapleton is a graduate of Alice Lloyd College in the Appalachian region of Eastern Kentucky. Inspired by founder Alice Lloyd’s commitment to finding the leaders of tomorrow in the unlikeliest of places, Dr. Stapleton is delighted to share that same philosophy - and his leadership - with the Kentucky Dental Association. Completing his training at the prestigious University of Louisville School of Dentistry, he is also one of the first to graduate from U of L’s reinvigorated Prosthodontics Residency Program. Celebrated for producing some of the finest specialists in the United States, the program at U of L is one of 57 accredited programs in the country and the only program of its kind in the state of Kentucky. While at U of L, Dr. Stapleton completed his Doctorate in Dental Medicine, a certificate in General Practice Residency, a certificate in Prosthodontics and a Masters of Science in Dentistry. A native of Prestonsburg, Dr. Stapleton founded iDENTity Dental Studio earlier this year in Lexington, responding to the region’s need for comprehensive, individualized dentistry. Dr. Stapleton’s approach is thoughtfully designed to treat the whole patient – not simply their problems – in iDENTity’s ultramodern laboratory and treatment studios.

Lexington native, Dr. Kate von Lackum, graduated from Tates Creek High School in 1996. She received a Bachelor of Arts in Biology from Hanover College, Hanover, IN. She returned to Lexington to complete a PhD in Microbiology at the University of Kentucky in 2006. She completed her dental education and periodontics training at the University of Florida College of Dentistry, Gainesville, FL. Dr. von Lackum is a Board Certified Diplomate of the American Board of Periodontology. Additionally, Dr. von Lackum trained to become a Fellow in the International

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