Das Davor — one patient, three systems.
A dental visit is a small relay race: book, treat, chart, bill, remind. Aster ran each leg in a different tool. “The patient existed in Dentrix, in Square, and in QuickBooks, three times, slightly differently,” says Dr. Nadia Hassan, Practice Owner. “The front desk spent its day being the human bridge between systems that should have known each other.”
Reminders were generic because the scheduling tool didn’t know what the chart knew. A six-month recall and a post-op check looked identical to the system sending the text, so they read identical to the patient too.
$930/month across four tools. Triple-entered patient records. Generic reminders that drove a stubborn no-show rate.
Der Wechsel — charts first, calmly.
Aster migrated patient records and the schedule first, kept the old systems read-only for one recall cycle, and moved billing once the team trusted the new flow. No appointment was ever at risk.
“My office manager was the skeptic,” Hassan says. “Two weeks in she told me to turn the old tools off early. That never happens.”
Was ersetzt wurde
| Altes Tool | Replaced by Mewayz module | Monatliche Ersparnis |
|---|---|---|
| Dentrix | Records & Charting | $420 |
| Square Appointments | Buchungen & Terminplanung | $90 |
| QuickBooks Plus | Buchhaltung | $90 |
| SMS reminder add-on | Patient Communications | $80 |
| Alter Stack gesamt | Mewayz Business | save $680/mo |
Der Schlüssel – the chart drives everything.
With charting, scheduling, and billing on one record, the practice runs itself a little more each week:
- Reminders pull context from the chart — recall vs. post-op, named procedure
- Treatment plans become estimates become invoices in a click
- The whole team shares one calendar — no double-booked chairs
- Patient balances and clinical history live on a single profile
A reminder that knows what the visit is for reads like a person wrote it. Patients show up for “your crown fitting Thursday” in a way they never did for “you have an appointment.”
Die neue Normalität — the front desk breathes.
“The front desk used to be a switchboard between three apps,” Hassan says. “Now it’s one screen. They spend the reclaimed time on patients instead of on copy-paste. That’s the version of efficiency I actually wanted.”