Skip to main content

Posts

Grateful Dentists | Beckers Dental + DSO Review Latest Publication

 We’re incredibly grateful to be featured in Becker’s Dental + DSO Review . Being included in a publication that’s so respected across the dental industry is an honor—and a reflection of the people, partnerships, and patients that make what we do possible every day. Professional coverage like Becker’s plays an important role in our field. It brings transparency to the industry, highlights innovation, and keeps dental leaders connected to the trends and challenges shaping the future of care. We’re thankful to be part of that conversation and proud to represent our team and communities on a national stage. 
Recent posts

Beautiful Spring Day in Kokomo | Grateful Dentists

 For nearly five decades, it has been our privilege to serve the Kokomo community. Since 1978, we’ve had the honor of caring for generations of families—watching kids grow up, welcoming new dental patients , and building relationships that go far beyond dentistry . That kind of trust isn’t something we take lightly. Kokomo isn’t just where we work—it’s home. And we’re incredibly grateful for every patient, every family, and every story that has walked through our doors over the years. Thank you for allowing us to be a small part of your lives since 1978. Here’s to continuing to serve this amazing community for many years to come. ❤️ 

2026 US Macro Economy | How to Position Your Dental Office

Heavy Treasury refinancing + a (re)expanding Fed balance sheet typically means liquidity is rising, but so is long-term uncertainty around rates, inflation, and asset values . That’s not a doomsday setup—but it is an environment where positioning matters a lot. For a dental group, I’d think about this in three layers: balance sheet, operations, and strategy. 1. Balance Sheet: Don’t get caught on the wrong side of rates Even if the Fed is adding liquidity, the Treasury issuing massive debt can keep longer-term rates elevated (or at least volatile). Implications: Floating-rate debt is a risk Refinancing windows may be unpredictable Lenders get more selective late-cycle What to do: Lock in fixed-rate debt where you can (or hedge floating exposure) Avoid over-leveraging on acquisitions assuming “easy refinancing later” Build cash reserves (3–6 months of expenses minimum for multi-site groups) If you’re planning a large project (buildout, equipment), consider pull...

Consumer Driven Economy | Is The Average Person Priced Out Of The Market

 🧩 The actual situation (by category) 1) Auto loans & negative equity ~ 29% of trade-ins have negative equity Average negative equity: ~$7,200 (many >$10k) Total auto debt: ~$1.65–1.67 trillion What it means: People are rolling old debt into new loans → “permanent car payments” This is a cash flow trap , not a banking crisis (yet) It reduces future consumption because income is already committed 👉 Risk level: Moderate, but corrosive over time 2) Mortgage stress (FHA / lower-income borrowers) Overall mortgage delinquency still relatively low (~1–4%) BUT: Sharp rise in lower-income / FHA borrowers FHA delinquency rates materially higher than conventional loans rising delinquency rates concentration in financially weaker households What it means: This is not 2008 (no widespread housing collapse) It is a stress signal at the margin , especially for first-time buyers 👉 Risk level: Contained, but a leading indicator 3) Stu...

Why Are Dentists Dropping Insurances

 If you’ve noticed more dental offices stepping away from insurance networks, you’re not imagining it. Across the country, dentists are re-evaluating their participation with insurance plans—and in many cases, choosing to go out-of-network altogether. At the center of this shift is a simple reality: the cost of delivering care is rising faster than what insurance companies are willing to pay. Let’s break down what’s driving this trend and what it means moving forward. The Squeeze: Rising Costs vs. Flat Reimbursements Running a dental practice in 2025 looks very different than it did even a few years ago. Dental equipment and materials are up approximately 6% Wages are rising faster than inflation , especially for hygienists and dental assistants Overhead costs—from rent to technology—continue to climb At the same time, insurance reimbursement rates have remained largely unchanged . This creates a growing gap: The cost to provide care is increasing… but the amount dentists are p...

Progress on the Farm | Proper Drainage

 Proper drainage on a farm is one of those unglamorous things that quietly determines whether everything else works—or doesn’t. 🌱 Why proper drainage matters 1. Protects crop yields Crops don’t just need water—they need oxygen at the root level . When soil is waterlogged: Roots suffocate (lack of oxygen) Nutrient uptake drops Disease risk increases (root rot, fungal issues) 👉 Even a few days of standing water at the wrong time can cut yields significantly . 2. Improves soil structure Good drainage keeps soil: Firm enough to support equipment Loose enough for roots to grow Without it: Soil becomes compacted Pores collapse Long-term productivity declines 3. Extends the growing window Well-drained fields: Dry out faster in spring → earlier planting Stay workable after rain → fewer delays 👉 Timing is everything in farming, and drainage buys you time. 4. Prevents erosion and runoff damage Proper systems (tile, ditches, grading) help: ...

DSO Taken Over By Their Lender | April 2026

  What actually happened (2026 restructuring) DCA completed a lender-driven recapitalization / takeover —not a bailout in the traditional sense. Key facts: Debt reduced by ~$1.1B+ $95M of new capital injected by existing lenders Debt maturities extended to 2031 Ownership effectively shifted to the lender group (first-lien creditors leading the deal) 👉 Translation: This was a classic debt-for-equity swap : Lenders forgave a massive chunk of debt In exchange, they took control of the company 🏦 Who the key players were (before vs after) Before restructuring (equity owners) Harvest Partners (private equity) – majority sponsor since 2015 Mubadala (sovereign wealth fund) – bought ~50% stake in 2022–2023 recap Management + possibly doctor minority equity 👉 This was a highly levered PE-backed DSO After restructuring (new control) First-lien lenders / private credit funds now control DCA Advised by restructuring firms (PJT, Milbank, et...