— DENTAL ANXIETY —

Most patients who walk into our clinic for the first time apologise before they even sit down. They say it has been too long. They say they are sorry. They are bracing for a lecture that is never going to come.
If it has been three, five, or ten years since you last sat in a dental chair, the first thing I want you to know is this: I see people like you every single week. You are not rare. You are not unusual. You are certainly not a bad person for avoiding something that scared you.
The most common thing I hear from a new patient on their first visit to our clinic is a version of this: “I’m so sorry. It’s been a really long time. I know it’s going to be bad.”They say it the moment they sit down, sometimes before I have introduced myself, as if they have to apologise before I discover it.
I want to change that, starting with this article.
True dental anxiety is not a personality flaw. It is usually built from one of three sources, and almost every anxious patient I see has a version of one of these stories:
An extraction at eight years old where nobody explained what was happening. A dentist who lost patience with a scared kid. A parent who said “don’t be a baby” in the chair. These memories don’t go away just because you grew up. They stay in the body, and twenty-five years later they still decide what you do on a Tuesday afternoon.
Many anxious patients I meet are not afraid of dentistry in the abstract they are afraid of how dentistry has felt. A dentist who started drilling before the numbing had fully set in. A clinic where the next patient was already in the chair before you had left. A chain-dental experience that felt transactional. After one of those visits, avoiding the next appointment is not irrational. It is self-protective.
For some patients, the anxiety isn’t about pain — it’s about not being able to speak, not knowing what is happening in your own mouth, and having to trust someone who hasn’t yet earned that trust. If you are someone who likes to know what is coming next, the dental chair is a particularly difficult place to be.
If one of these three stories sounds like yours, keep reading. The rest of this article is written for you.

We practise something called Slow Dentistry. It is exactly what it sounds like: we do not rush. And the first appointment with any anxious patient is the clearest example of what that means in practice.
When you arrive, your first conversation with me happens in a regular room, across a desk, with nothing in my hands. No instruments. No trays. No bright overhead light. The goal of the first appointment is for you to talk and for me to listen.
For most new patients, the very first appointment has no clinical work at all. We talk about what brought you in, what you’re worried about, what went wrong last time, and what you would like to happen. I will ask you how you want to communicate if you need a break during any future treatment. I will ask you whether you would prefer music, silence, or a conversation.
If you are comfortable, I will do a visual exam. No instruments, no scraping, nothing sharp. I just look, and I tell you what I see, in plain language. I show you the inside of your own mouth on a screen. You see what I see. No mystery.
At the end of the visit, we decide together what the next step is. If you are ready for a scale and clean, we book it. If you are not ready, we don’t. Nobody books you for anything you have not agreed to.
Before any procedure, I show you every instrument I am going to use, explain what it does, and demonstrate the sound if it makes one. Surprise is the enemy of calm.
You raise your hand, I stop. No exceptions, no negotiating, no “just one more second.” You decide when we pause.
Headphones are available if you want to listen to your own playlist. Many anxious patients tell us this single thing changed the experience.
We do not book back-to-back. The next patient is not waiting in reception while I work on you.
If you have not been to a dentist in years, your first treatment visit will often be a 20-minute scale and clean not a four-hour marathon. We build your trust in small, successful steps.
I want to be straight with you about one thing, because avoiding it would be dishonest: the longer you wait, the more the treatment needed grows. A cavity that would have been a ₹2,000 filling three years ago can become a ₹15,000 root canal today. I am not saying this to scare you. I am saying it so that when you do decide to come in, the first thing we do together is stop the clock.
The good news: most anxious patients who have been away for years come in expecting the worst, and the actual report is better than they feared. Teeth are remarkably resilient. Gums can recover. Most of what we find is fixable, and fixable in a sequence that doesn’t overwhelm you one visit, one step, at a time.
Yes. Dr. Spandana’s Dentistry in Raidurgam/Khajaguda explicitly practises Slow Dentistry a philosophy built around unhurried appointments, talk-first consultations, and a hand-raise signal during any procedure. This is different from general dental care and specifically designed for patients with dental anxiety.
You will not be the first patient to cry in our chair, and you will not be the last. We do not react, we do not comment, we simply stop and give you time. There is no version of this where you embarrass yourself in front of us.
For most anxious patients, the combination of Slow Dentistry techniques talk-first consultations, pre-procedure walkthroughs, hand-raise signals, extended appointment times is enough to complete treatment comfortably without sedation. In specific cases where sedation is clinically appropriate, we discuss it openly during consultation.
We block 45–60 minutes for a first consultation with a patient who describes themselves as anxious. This is intentional. A rushed first visit defeats the purpose.
We triage with you. Not everything needs to be done at once — some things are urgent, some can wait six months, some are purely cosmetic. We build a plan with a realistic sequence, and we are transparent about what is optional and what is not.
Modern dentistry, done well, is rarely painful. We use topical numbing before any injection, we wait for full numbing to take effect, and we use a hand-raise signal so you can pause us at any moment. Most patients tell us afterward, “I wish I had come sooner that wasn’t bad at all.”
Yes. Many anxious patients bring a partner, parent, or friend to the first consultation. They can sit in the consultation room with you. We find it often helps.
It means longer appointment slots, no back-to-back patient bookings, talk-first consultations before any clinical work, full pre-treatment walkthroughs, a hand-raise stop signal, and the freedom to spread treatment across multiple short visits rather than one long marathon.
45 minutes. Honest assessment. No pressure.
Mon–Sat, 11:00 AM – 8:00 PM | Sankalpam, Prashanthi Hills, Khajaguda, Hyderabad