The dreaded ‘call me’ lab ticket – why it’s time to talk differently

The dreaded 'call me' lab ticket – why it’s time to talk differently

Ashley Byrne highlights some common issues that crop up in communication between dentists and technicians, and why a ‘call me’ lab ticket can cause more confusion than clarity.

We’ve all seen it. The dreaded lab ticket with those two little words: ‘Call me.’

No details, no prescription, no hint of what’s needed, just a vague message that sends a ripple of frustration through the lab. It’s become the universal signal for ‘something’s gone wrong’ or perhaps ‘I haven’t quite decided yet’.

But as every technician knows, a ‘call me’ request is rarely simple. It means stopping work, picking up the phone, waiting for a dentist who’s in surgery, then playing a round of voicemail ping-pong before getting an answer that could have been sorted in two sentences by email.

Why we still struggle to communicate

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