All specialties
Dental

The clinical risk and the price, both understood and signed before the patient arrives.

Dentists carry two simultaneous exposures: clinical (nerve damage, endodontic failure, implant failure) and financial. Dentistry is one of the few disciplines with a dedicated ADA Informed Financial Consent policy (5.16), because bill shock after a multi-thousand-dollar treatment plan is a leading source of complaints. The fear is the patient who says both "I was never told the root canal could fail" and "I never agreed to that price." GetConsent pairs the treatment plan and the itemised cost estimate into one signed mobile journey.

A modern, well-equipped dental surgery
What changes for you

From a signature in a filing cabinet to evidence you can pull up in minutes

Bill shock after a multi-thousand-dollar treatment plan.
A treatment plan and itemised cost estimate signed in one journey, documenting the informed financial consent ADA Policy 5.16 calls for.
"I was never told the procedure could fail."
Procedure-specific consent with failure-rate and nerve-injury disclosure, comprehension-verified.
Paper forms scanned and filed by reception after the fact.
The patient completes consent on their phone; the evidence pack is in the record before treatment starts.
Consents that matter for you

The documents you actually send, ready on day one

Tooth extraction and surgical extraction (including wisdom teeth)Dental implant consent with staged timeline and costRoot canal therapy (failure rate, file separation, crown cost)Crown and bridge / prosthodontic consentPeriodontal therapy and surgery consentCosmetic dentistry: veneers and whiteningOrthodontic treatment agreement with staged paymentSedation and general-anaesthetic dental consentInformed Financial Consent / treatment-plan cost estimate (ADA 5.16)Clinical photography (before/after, intra-oral records)
Templates built for dental

Each one closes a specific, documented medico-legal gap

Procedure-specific content, comprehension checks calibrated to the litigated risks, and the named disclosure a generic form omits.

Treatment Plan + Informed Financial Consent (paired)
Clinical risks and the itemised cost estimate in one signed journey, acknowledging fees may vary.
Why it mattersDocuments the informed financial consent ADA Policy 5.16 calls for and pre-empts both the clinical and the "I never agreed to the price" complaint in one evidence pack.
Tooth Extraction Consent
Nerve injury / paraesthesia and dry-socket risk, comprehension-verified.
Why it mattersParaesthesia after a lower-molar extraction is a classic litigated outcome. A verified acknowledgement is the defence.
Dental Implant Consent + Staged Cost Estimate
Failure risk, staged timeline, and a multi-stage cost breakdown.
Why it mattersImplants are high-value and high-complaint. The staged IFC pre-empts bill shock.
Root Canal Therapy Consent
Failure rate, the possibility of needing extraction or implant later, plus crown cost.
Why it mattersSets the "RCT may not save the tooth" expectation that drives RCT disputes.
Veneers & Whitening Consent
Irreversibility of enamel preparation and sensitivity.
Why it mattersThe irreversible cosmetic decision, documented.
See it in action

What your patients and your team actually see

The same calm, governed experience behind every dental consent.

On the patient’s phone

Completed at home, understood before they arrive.

Your patient opens the consent on their own phone before the appointment. They review the procedure in plain language, answer a comprehension check on the specific risks, and note their questions. You see their results, and where they struggled, before the consultation begins.

  • Plain-language procedure content with audio read-aloud
  • A comprehension check with recorded attempt history
  • Questions captured before the consult, not during it
Patient reviewing their consent on a phone
Behind the scenes

One approved version of every dental template. Always.

Every template moves through Draft, Review, Approved and Published before it can reach a patient, with full version history and a named owner. Nothing live is ever silently changed, and nobody photocopies an outdated form from the second drawer.

  • Four-stage approval with complete version history
  • Procedure-specific disclosure that closes the medico-legal gap
  • Translations reviewed by a human before they go live
app.getconsent.health/admin/templates
GetConsent governed template library
Beyond procedure consent

The rest of the paperwork, on the same rails

The same governed workflow handles the cross-cutting documents your practice needs, authored once and reused everywhere.

  • Informed Financial Consent / cost estimate (central)
  • Clinical photography (before/after)
  • Cancellation and no-show policy
  • Cooling-off framing for elective cosmetic dentistry
  • Sedation and anaesthesia consent for surgical cases
The aha

My patient signs the treatment plan and the cost estimate in the same flow on their phone, so when they arrive, the clinical risks and the price are both already understood and documented.

ADA Policy Statement 5.16 (Informed Financial Consent)
The ADA requires informed financial consent. Pairing the treatment plan with an itemised, comprehension-verified cost estimate documents the informed financial consent ADA Policy 5.16 calls for and pre-empts the bill-shock complaint.
Reference →
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See it with your own procedure list

Clinics & practices

Send a real consent today

Solo clinicians and small practices set up in an afternoon and send their first consent the same day. No procurement, no sales call, no card. Nothing about your current process has to change until you are satisfied.

Hospitals & networks

See it run on your workflow

Multi-site hospitals and networks get a 30-minute demo configured for your EMR, your SSO, and the governance reports your accreditors actually ask for. You leave with a working trial account.