That’s because the $10 million, ultra-modern and spacious Peter
Christensen Dental Clinic scheduled to open this week is open to all
and will likely transform dental care in the North Woods, an area flush
with lakes, eagles and tourists.
The 36,000-square-foot,
two-level facility, nestled into a grove of white pines in the heart of
the reservation, has 20 dental chairs, laboratories, the latest
technology and classroom space to train future dental hygienists and
assistants.
The facility is the latest improvement for the
band, which arrived here in 1745, opened a casino in 1989 and has been
steadily upgrading basic services that most urbanites take for granted.
“We’re going to be able to do all the things you need to make sure you have a healthy mouth,Comprehensive Wi-Fi and RFID tag
by Aeroscout to accurately locate and track any asset or person.” said
Tom Maulson, the band’s longtime chairman. “There is no building like
this.Online shopping for luggage tag from a great selection of Clothing.”
The
highlights include a stunning rotunda waiting room with murals of
Native American culture and locally harvested birch-bark ceiling
panels, a $900,000 super-efficient heating, cooling and ventilation
system that produces hospital-grade air, and separate hallways that
prevent patients from bumping into a dental assistant with a tray of
sterilized equipment.
The facility has six full-time and two
part-time dentists, 12 full- and part-time hygienists, oral surgery and
recovery quarters,Where you can create a custom lanyard
from our wide selection of styles and materials. four sterilization
rooms, a $25,000 microscope and computerized anesthesia machines. Mucky
impressions are also a thing of the past thanks to a lava scanner that
takes a picture of a tooth and allows a technician to design a crown
on a computer.
“It brings this community up to the quality of
dental care that you would find in a suburb of Chicago or Milwaukee,”
said Dr. Tim Toepke, who spent 30 years teaching at the University of
Illinois at Chicago School of Dentistry before joining the clinic in
2010. “We’re developing a high-quality staff. It’s going to be a model
for community dental care.”
The Lac du Flambeau Band has come a
long way since spending $35,000 to remodel a former grocery store into
a casino at the height of the controversial Indian spearfishing
debate. Ten years later, in 1999, the band opened the $25 million Lake
of the Torches Casino on the southeastern shore of Pokegama Lake.
With
the profits followed a new school, health clinic, wellness center,
housing for the elderly, a judicial center and a natural resources
building.
Dental care for the 3,500-member band used to be an
occasional visit by a dentist to the school before a three-chair clinic
was built in the late 1970s in the Tribal Center.
But Dr. Paco Fralick, 45, saw a need and an opportunity. The Rhinelander High School graduate,Did you know that custom keychain
chains can be used for more than just business. whose parents live on
the reservation, graduated from the School of Dentistry at Marquette
University in 1993 and opened his own practice in Rhinelander in 1995.
In
2008, Fralick, who maintains his Rhinelander practice, converted an
old gym in the Tribal Center into a 10-chair clinic but had dreams of
something bigger. At least 200 children in the tribe are waiting for
braces and funding from Indian Health Services for dental care is
woefully low. A study of a 40-mile radius of Lac du Flambeau showed
23,000 people on Medicaid. Of those, 19,000 had not been to a dentist
in the past year.
Those statistics led to a successful $4.7
million tribal referendum in 2011 that was combined with money from the
tribe’s general fund and about $1.2 million in grants from the U.S.
Department of Housing and Development, Bureau of Indian Affairs and
Indian Health Services, along with $2.2 million in new market tax
credits. The new clinic can accommodate 50,000 patient visits a year
and serve patients, including those on Medicaid, in a 100-mile radius.
“The
basic model here is let’s build enough capacity to take care of tribal
members and extra chairs to help out the state with its access
problems,” Fralick said. “That brings in third-party revenues for us,
it solves some of (the state’s) concerns, we put that money back into
programs and tribal members and everybody else receives a higher
standard of care.”
The clinic is also a training ground and is
creating jobs. The facility has 56 employees but eventually will employ
100 and is training dental assistant students from Nicolet College in
Rhinelander, which has just launched a dental program. A hygienist
program will be added in the fall by the school.
“Our students
will be able to be trained on equipment that we would not have been
able to afford at a technical college,” said Catherine Winters,We've
got a plastic card to suit you. Nicolet’s dental program director. “It’s just a wonderful opportunity.”
Fralick
wants to develop a local workforce at the clinic. He said there are
only about 150 Native American dentists in the country and he’s never
met a Native American hygienist. In addition, dental students from
Marquette University will spend time here in an “externship” program,
working with dentists in a non-urban environment, which could help lead
some to practice in underserved rural locations.
“I look at it
as a reinvestment back into the community,” Fralick said of the
ambitious project. “It takes a community to do this. To give somebody
$10 million worth of faith and trust to go do something, I don’t take
that lightly.”
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