l - Nobilium
Transcription
l - Nobilium
EOWARO t. • 10 is sent to you by your Ticonium Laboratory, dodor. Th e magazine that covers the whole range of your interests professional and personal. The committee of five men, appointed by the Congress, who drafted the Declaration of Independence : BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, THOMAS JEFFERSON, JOHN ADAMS, ROBERT R. LIVINGSTON, AND ROGER SHERMAN. -,~ l THE BIRTH OF A NATION • within an hour someone would walk off with the lamp post!· Conversation Piece: What insect ranks in usefulness next to the honeybee and silkworm? A small Oriental insect that secretes the resinous substance lac, used in varnishes and polishes. . . . The first description of an inlay was made by a German dentist in 1834. He used a piece of walrus tusk to cement into a cavity... . Despite all the information given to the public via TV and the news media about the two leading killers, heart disease and cancer, a survey showed that the public was still generally insufficiently informed on these subjects. For example, with over 1,600 people questioned, 30 percent couldn't give a single symptom of cancer and 27 percent didn't even know a symptom of heart disease .... Are You Busy? Last year California dentists were sent a questionnaire to find out how busy they were. Of those who replied, 8,747, a total of 40 percent felt that they were not busy enough and needed more patients . ... To be waxed or not to be waxed, that's the question many are debating about dental floss. From the Journal of the Kentucky Dental Association comes the observation that although "unwaxed floss is presumed to clean more thoroughly, there is no evidence, to date, that waxed floss cannot be just as effective." ... Fruits with the most amount of sucrose are bananas, peaches, and prunes. . . . With the high rise in alcohol consumption, the U. S. Department of Transportation has put out a good pamphlet on the alcohol-related highway crash problem. Copies are available from James B. Gregory, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Washington 20590, . and could be good reading material for your waiting room. WHY ARE NEW DENTURES lOOSE? When your impression for a full upper denture was good (you tried the impression back in the mouth and the retention was excellent), and the bite was correct, whose fault is it when the finished denture doesn't stay in the mouth? Has the laboratory committed some error in processing the case? Perhaps, but before you start to place the blame on the technician check these points in eliminating the loose upper denture: 1. If the patient is wearing an old denture, be sure that it isn't worn for at least 24 hours before you take your final impression. T issue tone may not be at best unless the area is left uncompressed by an old denture. 2. Have patients avoid excessive amounts of fluid the day before impressions are taken. Unusual amounts of fluid, especially during the summer,. may cause tissues to be distended, thus not giving an accurate impression. 3. If patients have any food allergies caution them to avoid such foods before impressions are taken, for here again the tissues may be edematous and give an inaccurate impression. 4. Take impressions of elderly people in the morning. They are more likely to be free of edema than they are at the end of the day, especially if they have kidney or cardiac problems. DOCTO~ HEAlTHYSE~ Here is some good advice from the Journal of the American Dental Association of May 1956. "It seems paradoxical that dentists, engaged in the preservation of the oral health of the public, often make inadequate efforts to conserve and improve their own physical health . ... Certainly, many dentists ... give less thought and care to their own health than they do to that of the patients. The nation can ill afford to lose any of its dentists through premature death. The social loss is particularly acute when it involves dentists in their fifties, men of experience, knowledge, and skill. The dentist owes it to himself, his family, and the public to take every reasonable precaution to conserve his health and well-being." 10 An award·winning magaZIne for Dentists, Dental Assistants, and Dental Hygienists Pub ;s ed monlhly by TlCONIUM COMPANY DIvision of CMPIndustries, Inc., Albtny, New York Editor Contributing Editors Joseph Strack Arthur S. Freese, 0 0 S. Arthu H. l eVI e, D.D.S. Ma Urice J Teitelba m, D.D.S. Cover Artist Edward Kasper JULY 1976 VOL. XXXV NO. 7 by Maurice LADIES AND GE TlEMEN. THE MAIN EVENT! T It ' s ti me to deci de y o ur ro le in th natio no l e lecti on CANARIES 1MTHE D£HTAl OFFICE Not the feathere d vert eb rates, b ut the ou tst and i n9 pe rso ns every prof ss io n needs 3 HOW TO DIVORCE AN ASSOCIATE Ex act ly w hat you shou ld do, an d why . 5 lADY WITHAMISSION An o ff b e at p iec e b y a tal ented w ri t er. Tr eat yo urse lf t o a rel axin g, co lo rful to le from the For East 7 BOOKS M ost inter sting a nd read able revi ew s, ta ilor-mode f or Tie reo ders 12 ANGUS AND IMPRESSIONS A W. C. Fiel ds ' r eport on child d e nta l p atie nt s; Dento l Th isa an d Da ta ; Wh y Are De ntur s l o o se ? a nd Docto r, Hea l Thyse lf 15 An" Arbor M' th '" 481 06 umber t $ U~ ISS 0040 ·671 1> TIC. C' pyr ght, 1976, Ttcon iU"11 Comp ny, Dil ls Of) of C , P Ind. trt es, Inc., York 12207 413 t rth Pearl St, Ai Y Opt.,o s .' pr..• j bl o" trt b t ors ! TIC do n I nto.t ' tly .. Hett the \ , 01 t ' e p blislltrs '·e. . "CONFIDENTIALLY . . . " p" ltd 'n U SA. by Jer~y P.rt nti"9 C An 16 TIC, JULY, 1976 J. Teitelbaum, D.D.S. CON.TENTS "'1Sub r pI," 1. $5 00 TIC, JULY, 1976 Inc , 8.yonn., N J he political primaries are over and selection of the presidential candidates this month and next will complete the preliminaries. The main event is next. We had better prepare for it now. The November election will be a big one in importance because our country is beset with serious, and critical, problems-social, economic, defense, foreign relations, environmental. And some major medical-dental legislation will be passed next year at the nationalleveL We have the opportunity and the responsibility to make some input into needed policy-making and problem-solving by voting for, and Supp0l1ing, candidates whose policies we want to prevail. It is urgent that we do so, for our private and professional lives are substantially affected by government goals, programs, and actions. How best to do this? And to do it without adding to the divisivness and difficulties that threaten to characterize this election. To plunge into the political arena recklessly, without thought of the consequences to ourselves and our practices, can be as foolhardy and hazardous as remaining aloof and above the battle. Aloofness in matters of personal and national concern is a luxury only those in the cemetery can afford. Politics and religion are two subjects that can turn a quiet, sensible individual into a raving, irrational bigot. Obviously, the office is therefore no place to get into a heated political discussion. But what can you do when cornered by a patient into declaring your presidential preference? Suppose you have just given a patient a local anesthetic and while waiting to begin the preparation of teeth for extensive bridgework (a lucrative case) the patient starts ranting and raving about the elections. He is passionately for so-and-so, so much so that he calls your candidate a " bum." And then he asks for your opinion. What do you say? When dealing with someone who is so zealous, tact and discretion are the guiding words. Your best approach i~ to first placate him With , "You may be right. " Then, "However, I'm not sure. I really haven't made up my mind yet." Above all, don't prolong the discussion and treat the moment lightly by saying, "Well, no matter who is elected, I still have to get these teeth fixed," then pick up your instruments and get to work. When the presidential campaign crops up into a conversation, as it certainly will many times in the months ahead , try to keep it in a low key . If you feel strongly about a candidate there's no reason why you can't say so; you may even win a few votes for your party. But never allow your remarks to evolve into a debate or get out of control. Try to be selective about the people you talk to. Those who you know feel as you do will be pleased by your "good" judgment. I because the selection firm's premise is unique and its methods are a sharp departure from traditional paper and pencil fragmented psychological testing. Selection Research Incorporated (SRI)! believes that if one wished to separate canaries from a large flock of assorted types of birds, one only needs to be able to recognize canaries. It is not necessary to study crows, cardinals, robins, sparrows, etc. Once one recognizes canaries, they can be sorted out of the flock with little difficulty. The same seems to be true of canary people. What makes this possible is the discovery by SRI two decades ago that canary people think and talk differently than less effective people. Canaries' attitudes toward those they serve are different also. These differences are remarkably more discriminative than any traits that can be measured by traditional paperand-pencil test methods. When asked carefully selected open ended questions about people, work, and themselves, most canaries tend to give similar verbal responses. By structuring a lengthy, broad spectrum series of questions, for which canary responses have been identified, it is possible to interview anyone who wishes to be evaluated. By analyzing the tape recorded responses and comparing them to typical canary responses, it is possible to measure the comparative strengths of the person being interviewed. When used as a selection device, those applicants giving the greatest number of responseslike pureblood canaries-are considered most likely to be successful. When used as a developmental aid, one's comparative strengths and weaknesses can be compared to the canary profile to locate growth needs and opportunities. The profile can also be used to match people who work together so that they complement one another's strengths and work more effectively together. Each area of strength is referred to as a "life theme." These themes seem to become well developed during childhood and adolescence. The themes are fairly well established by the time one enters college, and, interestingly enough, present methods of teaching do not significantly alter themes. For instance, potentially effective teachers can be readily identified from other college freshmen. Persons likely to be less than effective' can also be identified, and 4 years of teacher's college doesn't make them much better. 2 This seems to imply that selection is far more important than training, although, of course, training is certainly still needed, even by canaries. It also implies that if the term "doctor" literally means "teacher," dentistry had best select natural teachers and make dentists out of them. If it did, the profession would change dramatically within a decade. The canary dentist seems to have 14 life themes. They include mission, health, ethics, ego drive, self actualization, relator, individualized perception, activator, delegator, conceptualization, sophistication, 4 technology, time binder, and empathy. The auxiliary profile is not quite as elaborate, but still has nine themes. They are mission, interaction, rapport, gestalt, self-concept, activator, empathy, organizational relationship, and continuity. Most dentists have been selected for the profession because of a strong technological theme. Assumedly, they also have a good attitude toward health and they are, hopefully, ethical. The canary profile bears this out. In addition, the more successful dentists tend also to have good ego drive and a marked tendency toward self-actualization. However, as research with the profiles has progressed, some interesting theme variations have been noted. For instance, those dentists who have outstanding preventive practices seem to be better able to conceptualize than their less successful colleagues. The less successful seem equally as ethical, interested, sincere, and honest, but do not seem to be able to conceptualize what it is they are trying to accomplish in making their practices more preventive. This may account for the discovery, in a recent survey by the ADA, that those dentists who felt that they were paid adequately for the time spent with preventive programs have higher gross incomes than those who do not feel that they are paid adequately for prevention, compared to the time it takes. 3 Perhaps those who can get their preventive programs organized so that patients will accept and pay for them, have also organized the rest of their practices to obtain better acceptance from their patients. Of critical importance, from an auxiliary and patient management standpoint, are weaknesses in the themes of delegator, relator, individualized perception, and activator. These strengths have not been sought in prospective dental students, and as a result, it is common for these specific themes to be weak in many dentists even though they may score very high ethically and technically. Dentists with such weak themes are seriously handicapped. They may have considerable auxiliary turnover and many patients who do not accept the high quality dentistry that is offered them. Unless such a dentist is aware of his weak themes, he quite likely blames his auxiliaries or patients (or some external circumstance such as the community's low dental 10 or its depressed economy) . On the other hand, if the dentist's weak themes could be understood by him, and if he seeks adequate growth and management service, his auxiliaries (or associate dentists) may be able to help him compensate for his weaknesses to sharply increase his effectiveness with personnel and patients alike. These compensations may be far easier to talk about than to accomplish. If a dentist's childhood and early adult experience left him with a weak delegator theme, he may find it extremely difficult to allow auxiliaries (Continued on Page 14) TIC, JULY, 1976 particular interest-even photographs of pre-man's cavities, how Buddha planted one of his toothbrush twigs and it became a tree, and much more. A beautiful book. CHRIST CHURCH, Philadelphia, where Washington and Franklin worshipped, and where the latter is buried in the church cemetery. Below, Independence Hall, Philadelphia, w her e the Declaration of Independence was signed, the Continental Congress met, and the Liberty Bell is housed. social and moral." With the dental section written by Dr. Joseph M. Sim, Assistant Professor of Pedodontics, this book offers a great deal to the dental practitioner who increasingly faces the specialized problem of handling the teenager whose emotional problems often show themselves in his oral reactions as he tries to mature, and whose parents increasingly demand special consideration for their offspring, who is terribly difficult to handle at best. Here is much-needed help. Operating on the Mind, by Gaylin, Meister and Neville, 224 pp., $11.95, New York, Basic Books, 1976. The authors are, respectively, a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a philosopher-the best combination for those considering the current controversy about psychosurgery. Prepared under the direction of the Institute of Society, Ethics and Life Sciences, this is the product of some of the leading thinkers in this field. I have written myself on psychosurgery, so I'm familiar with the unique combination of complicating factors - ethical, neurologic, psychiatric, social - involved here. The final chapter-The Need for Policy -by a professor of sociology sums up the complexities and societal necessities all of which must be considered. The authors should be proud of this - a thinking man's book. The Healing Hand, by Guid Manjoo, 66 pp., ill. (some in color), $25.00, Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1975. Not surprisingly, this book won the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, for this is a fascinating volume by the Chairman of the Department of Pathology at University of Massachusetts Medical School. Heavily illustrated in both black-and-white and color, this is the story of man's struggle to deal with the fruits of violence, the effort to heal. There's a lot to be learned here-of how ancient man did right and wrong, even to using large-jawed ants to hold the lips of a wound together. And there is a good deal for the dentist's TIC, JULY, 1976 Murder for Your Pleasure: the whodunits. Adventure, Mystery, and Romance, by John G. Cawelti (The University of Chicago Press, 1976, $15.00) is the how-to of whodunits, Westerns, and the rest of the "formula" stories. Here are the artistic characteristics, the archetypal patterns, of the classical detective stories, the Westerns, and the "social melodrama" (of Irving Wallace). Here are the formulae as well as their bases in human psychology. Well written, original, and intriguing. Want to write??? Some of the oldies still stand up, and Up for Grabs (Pocket Books, $1.25) by A. A. Fair (a pseudonym of ErIe Stanley Gardner) is well worth looking into. Bertha Cool and Donald Lam are much better than Perry Mason-for here Gardner escapes the onedimension of Perry Mason stories and brings character and flavor with a good dash of humor to join his well-laid plots and murder. Good to see A. A. Fair back. Well worth reading. Out of Sweden come mysteries by Maj. Sjowall and Per WahlOo. The Abominable Man (Bantam Books, 95¢) is a terrifying tale of an insane ex-policeman driven to murderous revenge on an entire police force in a carefully wrought, brilliant rendition of a troubled and confused society. Good characterization, realistic, a real shocker. Exciting thriller! Bill Knox writes of the Glasgow C.LD. and Detective Chief Inspector Colin Thane once more in Rally to Kill (Doubleday, $5.95). Mix auto racing, rookie patrolmen, the battered corpse of a young girl stuffed in the trunk of an abandoned car, a Peeping Tom, a hostile boss, and a victim strangled after her death and you've got another good mystery. John Wainwright is getting known for his odd plots and subtle mysteries. Death of a Big Man (St. Martin's Press, $6.95) is no exception. A former chief superintendent of police in an English county-now a paraplegic from a criminal's bullet-joins a cabal of policemen to murder a criminal outside the clutches of the law. Here it gets complicated, looks as if he joins the criminal, and then-you'll have to read this yourself to find the end to a real thriller. 13 How to "Divorce" an Associate by Joseph Arkin, C.P.A., M.B.A. Psychosomatic Medicine, by Alistair Munro, 100 pp. , $6.00, London, Churchill Livingstone, 1973. This is a paperback in a series called The Practitioner Library and it is just that, meant specifically for you and should prove of considerable value to dentists who look beyond the teeth to see the patient they're treating. Beside Munro, University of Liverpool professor of psychiatry, the contributors represent a broad range of specialties such as surgery, dermatology, and the rest. Well written and broad in its approach, as Munroe puts it: "There is little, if any, justification for regarding mind and body as separate entities." While the chapter on headaches may be most interesting to the dentist, there is nothing from which he cannot learn in this modestly priced but very useful addition to any dental library-interesting and informative. The Word Book, by Kahn and Mulkerne, 256 pp., $2.95, Be\erly Hills, Glencoe Press, 1975. This is one of those inexpensive mi ghty mites which warrant several purchases (for your own desk, your ,ecrctary's, and your home). Not only does it give you quick spelling for nearly 23,000 words but it also tells you how to divide th em when you come to the end of a line; rules for consonants, suffixes, and unusual words; a helpful punctu ation review, and the mea nings of common abbreviations (from AAUP to WHO and ZIP) . There are the metric equivalents and two-letter State abbrevi ations, a dictionary of geographical names, and proofreaders' symbols . Most practical! Bodyguard at Lies, by Anthony Cave Brown, 957 pp., ill., $ 15 .95, New York , Harper & Row, J 975. A monumental book, large with necess ary maps and illustrations-yet I couldn't put it down. This amazing and fascinating story of the intricate deception, secret agents and double agents, espionage and counter espionage, and cryptanalysis of World War II- 12 despite its length and intricacies-reads more like a spy thriller than the carefully researched history it actually is. Not surprisingly, it took this British journalist a dozen years to .write-and it's all there: the German High Command members who fought Hitler clandestinely by passing information to the Allies, the machines that broke the Nazi secret military codes, the deceits and Montgomery's "double," the heroes and the rogues, the British decision to allow Coventry to be destroyed, the armies that weren't there except on paper or broadcasting, the attempts on Hitler's life. Here too are Churchill, FDR, Stalin, and De Gaulle in their strengths and weaknesses, brilliance and stupidity. Utterly fascinating. Dentists about to enter into partnership or corporate practice with an associate often neglect to provide a means of "divorce" or dissolution. This is one reason that partnership or corporate buy-sell agreements often dwell only on the mechanics of a dissolution caused by death or permanent disability, ignoring the fact that most joint practices are dissolved by disagreements and conflicts of personality. Assuming that you are faced with the problem of how to break up your joint practice in an equitable fashion, the basic step is to reread your agreement and see what provisions have been made for dissolution. In each particular case there will be a different set of circumstances and generally there will be no easy answer to the multiple problems faced. Basically, these are the areas of common concern : 1. Provisions tor settlement of debits of the practice-To protect each practitioner, adequate provision should be made for the payment of all debts to vendors and filing of final labor and business tax returns. If the firm has a retirement plan, steps have to be taken to assure continuation of the trust by transfer to those individuals who elect to continue the practice. (See trust agreement for provisions as to transfers to succeeding interests.) Contracts and leases for rental of vehicles and equipment and contingent liabilities are areas where obligations have to be established and spelled out. 2. Collection at Accounts Receivable-A simple way would be for the firm's accountant or lawyer to be designated as a collection agent and notify each patient that outstanding debts are to be remitted to him as trustee. The problem here is that some patients will not pay in full to allow an easy split-up of remaining cash after payment of debts. In this case the outstanding patient debts can be assigned to the practitioner who is going to service that particular patient after termination of the joint practice. Adjustment will have to be made for amounts so assigned when distributing the remaining net assets. One problem that can easily be seen is that of the practitioner who takes on a disproportionate amount of uncollected receivables. He may very well end up at the short end of the stick if these debts become in part uncollectible. Obviously, the dissolution can't be phased out indefinitely as the reason for dissolution is most likely disagreement. The partners want out and they want it as soon as possible. Only a Solomon could devise a foolproof system of dividing accounts receivable to provide for complete equity. 3. Division of Remaining Assets-After payment Explorations in Psychohistory, by Robert Jay Lifton, 372 pp. (paperback), $3.95, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1974. This book is of particular importance in our presidential election year. Psychohistory is a new psychological discipline, a tool for understanding the psychology of the individual and of history, their interaction and-in short-what makes history tick. This year, of all recent ones, is the time to look at politicians with this information and in this way. Utilized to its full, psychohistory might well have spared us Watergate and perhaps even World War II. This volume offers papers by all the leading practitioners of this arcane art, including such as Erik Erikson , Robert Coles, and Kenneth Keniston. Worth reading. The Adolescent Patient, by William A. Daniel, Jr. , 456 pp., ill., $22.50, St. Louis, The C. V. Mosby Company, 1970. Professor of Pediatrics and Director of the Adolescent Unit at University of Al abama Medical Center, Dr. Daniels is the ideal authority to do this book, and his concept is one that demands the cooperation of dentists: "Our aim is no longer mere absence of disease but the presence of health-physical, mental, TIC, JULY, 1976 "YEAH, DOC, YOUR ESTIMATE'S READY. WE'RE JUST CELEBRATIN' IT!" TIC, JULY, 1976 5 of debts and arrangements for collection of accounts receivable, the remaining cash is split according to partnership capital accounts, or corporate shareholdings. This is the easy part. How do you divide the equipment (office and dental?) Or the leasehold improvements (floor coverings, electrical wiring, plumbing, decorating, etc.), biologicals, office supplies? And which practitioner gets to keep the office telephone number? This latter aspect is all-important. We all know that people tend to go back to a familiar place; this very factor is the prime ingredient in the creation of good will. They tend, too, to call a number already known to them and listed in their personal directories. Perhaps the fairest way is for all members of the firm to open offices in another building, giving up of the phone number, and selling all of the equipment to a dealer or by private sale through classified advertising. This may be spiteful, may even be malicious, but even if one practitioner offers to pay for the leasehold improvements and pay a fair price for the equipment, the fact remains that he'll have the edge in keeping riot only those patients assigned to him but attracting those assigned to other retiring practitioners-and he'll have first crack at all new patients. The library can be offered for sale and if no agreement can be reached as to who will be permitted to buy it, a price can be predetermined and a drawing held to select a buyer. Or a sale can be made to an outsider. Biologicals and other supplies can be split up among the practitioners or sold to them or to outsiders. 4. Splitting up the Patients-A big asset in any practice is the income-producing factor, in this case the patients being served. Where two or more practices were merged to form an entity, it is possible to assign the patients to the dentist who brought them into the practice. Of course, inequities will result if, through the ordinary contingencies of life, some patients have died, moved to other cities, or simply changed dentists. Or, where there was a cash adjustment at the outset for differences in amount of gross income, adjustments will again have to be made. To even things off in any split-up, new patients can be used to balance the scales of equity. But, it must be kept in mind that patients are not chattels and they may not want to be "palmed off" to one particular practitioner they really don't like. This human factor has to be taken into account when deciding which practitioner gets which patient. An agreement has to be entered into providing that patients will not be pirated. All x-rays and patient records will have to be trans- 6 ferred according to the agreed-upon division. Note that ethical factors and state law may come into play if there is an attempt to even off patient load by assignment of patients. 5. Division of Staff-It is a recognized fact that every professional practice spends countless hours and a lot of money to properly train staff members. In any break-up it follows that each practitioner will want to retain trained and experienced help. Again we may have a serious problem and certainly we don't want to force an employee to work for one practitioner as opposed to another. Yet, we can't afford to get into a bidding situation where one practitioner will try to outbid the others and thus hope to retain certain staff members. If no settlement can be reached, the only solution is to let each staff member pick the person for whom he or she wants to work. An agreement for salaries offered not to exceed 115 or 125 percent of the latest salary paid can be an alternative to a bidding situation. If any items in this article have disturbed you, now is the time to dig out your agreement and see if there are major deficiencies. The time to take care of these matters is when you are friendly with your associates and no ill-feeling exists. Once you reach the point of getting that "divorce," it is too late. Animosity will cloud clear thinking and only tend to place additional obstacles in the path of providing for an ordinary, orderly dissolution of a professional practice. 139 SE 3rd Street Hallendale. Florida 33009 :Da\.\OWCk "NO, I DIDN'T START ON A SHOESTRING . PA GAVE ME TEN BIG ONES." TIC, JULY, 1976 drill. And, naturally, they just can't afford to have x-rays taken of their teeth. Regardless of the nature of their ailment, when they come to my dispensary I make it a point to inspect their teeth. I probe every tooth with an explorer, and then make a simple drawing of upper and lower jaw, specifying by numbers the teeth that need attention. This I give to them, and I try to scold them into going to the dental clinic in Kowloon. They promise, but, of course, they don't." She continued: "Gum diseases are the major cause of tooth loss among the adult Shui-jen. There seems to be considerable wasting away of the bone supporting the teeth among these boat people, which is because they neglect their diseases of the gums and periodontal tissue. When they come here, and I see that they have impacted food particles and heavy dental tartar or plaque, I scrape away as much as I can. But, as I say, my scope is limited. I just don't have the equipment." I commented: "1 should imagine you have a difficult time with one of these husky Shui-jell women and men when you clamp onto a tooth and start pulling." "Yes, they come only when the tooth is giving them considerable pain and its pulp completely decaycd. You can hear them yowling for miles. When there's a particularly bad one, I tell Bill's wife to play the organ loudly in the Proclaiming Light classroom so the entire Yaumati Shelter won't think murder is being committed here. "Fortunately, I've never had any tooth or bonc fractures. I try to be as careful as possible, making sure of a solid hold before starting the extraction. I do apply a local pain-killer to the gum area of the offending tooth, but it doesn't do the job completely. Well, in the early days of the West, the barber- dentist gave his victims a shot of whiskey, which 1 can't do here. Anyway, I have some pain-killers to give my patients afterwards which lessens the after-effects of the extractions, and I've been able to control bleeding to a minimum." "Do you think later you might go in for more sophisticated dental care for the Shui-jen?" I asked. Ethel shook her head. "No, these people are just not conditioned for such attention, involving partial dentures, filling of cavities with silver amalgam, crowning and capping of teeth with gold, the use of synthetic porcelain and plastic, root canal work, or occlusal reconstruction. That is work for a modern dental office ashore. Eventually, as the children of the Shlli-jen become more educated, they will become more concerned about dental hygiene and care. But the old folks will only come to my dispensary when they can't stand the pain of a toothache any longer. So for now it'll just be for what I do." With the fairly recent interest in acupuncture in America, I inquired if Hong Kong dentists were using TIC, JULY, 1976 this therapeutic method in modern dental offices. Ethel nodded: "Almost 300 years before the birth of Christ they were using gold needles for various diseases, and they were also applied to the gums and teeth." She smiled over a sudden thought. "When I get a particularly apprehensive dental patient for a rugged tooth extraction, I use a bit of psychology. The Shuijell do have a spartan side to their character. They face death at sea in typhoons in the China Sea many time. But having a tooth pulled seems to overawe them. Therefore, I feel I must bolster them up, make them feel ashamed of their anxieties and cringing away from the forceps. So I tell them the story of Apollonia, the so-called patron saint of dentistry who was tortured by having all her teeth broken or knocked out because she refused to renounce her religion. She was threatened with being burned alive, but before her persecutors could cast her into the fire she threw herself into it. "And that story makes them ashamed of their uproar over a single toothache?" Ethel nodded: "You might say it gives them a stiffer upper lip." Ethel has not had an easy time administering medically and spiritually to the Shui-jen. "It isn't a simple effort to convert the Chinese Shuijell to Christianity and approved modern medicines and techniques. They have had for centuries traditional religious beliefs and established Chinese medicines, remedies as old as civilization itself, every sort of weird powder, ointment, tonic, and pill that might be compounded of such things as dried monkey hearts, dried entrails of lizards, parings of tiger claws, and so on. There's a lot of what you might call sorcery and mumbo-jumbo in their medicine. "However, although the Shui-jen might be steeped deeply in Chinese traditions where medicine is concerned, they can tell the symptoms of approaching death in a loved one. When an otherwise doomed person is snatched away from the brink of death. merely by the sudden injection of a hypodermic needle, then they open up their minds to modern medicine. Our medical care, free to them, is our means of public relations, of reaching them, of gaining their primary trust, so they will come to our Proclaiming Light and listen to the words of the Christian faith." Sometime later, Ethel Groce left the Yaumati Boat Mission, and gave her attention to the roof-dwellers of Hong Kong, most of them refugees from Communist China. The world is a much better place for such as she. P.O. Box M Honolulu. Hawaii 96815 II down here to Kowloon, running a barrage of Communist machine-gun fire." What a saga that must have been! Mming at a snail's pace, traveling mostly by night, hiding by day in small coves and inlets, to escape Communist river patrols. When she joined me in the living room, physical signs of her exhaustion were erased. She was a slender, attractive woman of medium height, and she looked years younger than her actual age. Her skin \ 'as smooth , the eyes behind the glasses serene and very blue, the mouth gentle, the jaw, however, strong. The quality that impressed me immediately about this "lady with a mi ssion" was that here was a woman who had found a fully rewarding career to which she could give complete dedication. "My first post in China was in early 1938 in the leper colony of Tsing Yuen in the Province of Kwantung, outside Canton. When the Japanese invaded China, I reported for work at the Presbyterian Hospital in Lin Shien, about 150 miles northwest of Canton, where I remained until October 1944. At the close of World War II, I was ordercd back to America. But they couldn't keep me there. In July of J 946 I was back in Hong Kong on my way to Canton. There I found that the mission boats had been taken over by the Japanese, used as barracks, and then scuttlcd in 1943. "The Chinese Communists drove us out of Canton in 1949. But when we left, the Proclaiming Light came with us." Ethel smiled softly upon the ancient cumbersome craft with its open top verandah and diminished belfry containing the swinging metal cylinder for summoning the students to class . "I have a great sentimental attachment for that old tub." The Dental Health Scene I was especially interested in the scope of her dental work in the Yaumati Junk Shelter, especially because she was not a dentist. "My forceps must be at least 50 years old, but it does the work," she said, smiling. "And, believe me, when I've finally extracted a molar from one of these Shui-jen you can be sure my back and arm muscles ache. Their teeth must be the biggest and the most deeply imbedded of any race in the world. But, then, dentistry is a gruelling occupation. "Basically, their diet is good, rather heavy in calcium from their fish-diet , but they sometimes lack some of the assimilative vitamins, such as D in conjunction with calcium, so I hand out a lot of special calcium pills. The prime teeth problem of the Sllllijen is that they just won't come here or go ashore for a regular checkup, and using a brush and dentifricealthough China invented the bristle toothbrush in the 15th century-is not one of their daily habits. So, although their dental health is quite good, they just won't attend to any cavities. The idea of having a tooth drilled frightens them. I guess they've heard too many stories about howls coming out of a shoreside dentist's office over the loud whine of a burred A YOUNG SHUI-JEN GIRL ACTS AS RECEPTIONIST IN THE DISPENSARY ON DR . GROCE'S HOUSEBOAT. THE FAITHFUL LIGHT. 10 TIC, JULY, 1976 LADY WITH A MISSION A pair of old forceps, a small medical kit, a Bible, and an indomitable will to help others made her famous among the "boat people" in the junk shelters of Hong Kong's harbor. Text and Photos by Wilmon Menard N a dentist, or physician, has had a more challenging and interesting group of patients than Ethel Groce , the "Lady with a Mission." So, before I introduce you to Ethel, let me tell you about her patients-"the sea gypsies of the South China Seas." I first saw the "boat people," or Shui-jen, of South China from the bridge of a Norwegian freighter that was approaching the rocky islands guarding the entrance to Britain's Crown Colony of Hong Kong. The flotilla of junks and purse-seiners suddenly appeared between the island passages, like a Ming armada, careening high-pooped crafts, the same today as a thousand years ago, with their huge single lug-sails flapping in the variable wind. Some showed the white wake of auxiliary marine-engine propulsion. Captain Anhart, the skipper, handed me his binoculars, remarking: : "Fishing junks manned by the best seamen of the Orient-the 'water people,' sometimes called 'the sea gypsies of the South China Seas'." I brought one of the junks into sharp focus , and I could see the family activity on deck-men, women, and children moving with effortless precision to perform primitive nautical duties older than the Norsemen's. Women squatted over galley-stoves in the stern or on the poop; young boys were handling lines or repiling nets on the foredeck; six-year-olds were sluicing down the decks with small buckets of sea water. The "master," grandfather or father, stood immobile aft, a figure of celestial patience, with his hands on the relic helm. Everyone had a duty to perform. As the freighter moved up the heavily trafficked harbor of Hong Kong, I saw that the vessels moored to buoys in the center of Victoria Harbor were crowdTIC, JULY, 1976 DR. ETHEL GROCE MAKING HER ROUNDS. ed with small junks and one-masted lighters, the aristocrats of the Shui-jen, who enjoy a measure of social respect and status depending on the type of cargo unloaded into their holds or on deck for discharge ashore. The sampans of beggars and sea-going peddlers moved slowly along the flanks of the cargo ships that flew the flag of every nation; young, pretty Shuijen girls, with glistening black braids swaying to their motion, sculled in close, smiling, and waving to attract the attention of seamen. The wide roadstead between Kowloon and Hong Kong Island was congested with Chinese craft-of every conceivable design and color of sails-that were being guided or yuloh-ed (stern-sculled) with a long sweep) on seemingly erratic courses, contending for routes with the incoming and outgoing freighters and passenger vessels, or the criss-crossing Star Ferries, calculating the margin of clearance so finely that one wondered there was not a serious collision. I later learned that the sea gypsies of Hong Kong purposely cut close to larger ships, particularly of a foreign flag, because they believe that they could pass their badluck demons onto a pass ing vessel , which sometimes can result in serious rammings. Once ashore in Hong Kong one of my first interests was the Shui-jen, and I learned that they were not pure Chinese, but ancient aboriginal descendants of the Orient, who never settled ashore. They have always manned sea-going junks and controlled deep-sea and coastal fishing. Ancient laws once forbade them to step foot on land, to inter-marry with those of the land, or to be eligible for the Imperial Examinations to educate themselves. But during the reign of K' ang Hsi (1662-1721) the land ban against them was mod- "1 ified slightly, and they were then permitted to build shacks along certain waterfronts. However, acquiring an education and intermarrying with land people were still taboo. Even tod ay the Shui-jen are disinclined to settle ashore, and hold an inherent suspicion and distrust of land people. They have a saying: "We always sail away from land troubles." There has been no official census taken of the Shuijen for a long time, because refugees from Communist China at one time came en masse to the junk shelters of Hong Kong, down the Pearl River to Macao, and then on to Hong Kong and Kowloon. But a fair estimate is that there are close to 225,000 Shui-jen in the Crown Colony shelters, half of them fishermen, the rest engaged mainly in trading voyages, and cargo and passenger transportation. I was to spend many days being sculled among the watery labyrinths, formed by the moored junks and sampans of the Yaumati Junk Shelter on the Kowloon-side of the bay, which is within walking-distance of most hotels in Kowloon . Wide open channels run the length of this "floating world," bisected with narrow waterways. Junks are strange crafts, with their ancient bamboo-ribbed, accordion sails, lofty poops, broad hulls, and flat keels. But many of them have come safely through the worst typhoons of the South China Sea. Pigs and poultry are raised aboard the junks, dogs romp on deck, and cats chase one another in the rigging; a fiery red rooster perched on a rail is a familiar silhouette, extending himself to flare his neck feathers and scream a challenge to another cockerel on an adjacent junk. Sampans and bum-boats deliver fresh water, firewood, vegetables, and other groceries; there are floating drydocks for scraping and repairing hulls; they have a coffin-maker (the Shui-jen, as with all Chinese people, are always given interment ashore), a yodelling postman, an ancient fortune-teller, and an aquatic doctor to dispense mysterious pills, powders, fluids, and sundry elixirs to the ailing. The Shui-jen also have their schools in their fioating world. And their recreation-junks for eating, drinking, and gossiping with each other. There is, also, a double row of sampans in one water-way, the red-light district, where pretty Shui-jen prostitutes sit in the stern to entice the roving males of the Junk Shelter. And all the junks and sampans have their Buddhist and Taoist shrines, with burning joss sticks and effigies, rice-paner prayers, and the ancient and revered family tablets. The more time I spent among the Junk Shelters of the Shui-jen, my admiration and respect for them increased because of their happy, industrious, patient dispositions which permitted them to live in primitive, close-packed harmony aboard their crafts. Everything is shipshape aboard, even though every inch of space is taken up by family members of several gen- 8 erations. The scenes of routine actIVIty are always pleasant: the mother, whom everyone worships, squats with her daughters tending open-galley fires, scrubbing pots, ladling water or soup, washing rice, chopping up food for quick-cooking, combining, in the invention of centuries-old recipes, aromas more subtle and mouth-watering than a Cordon-Bleu chef. The father, or the grandfather, the master of the craft, attends to, and overseas, major repairs and adjustments to rigging, sail, and seine, an eight-year-olddaughter spreads washed clothes over a boom to dry, at the same time keeping a vigilant eye on a crawling infant to be sure it has not slipped its waist-cloth and line and is in danger of falling overboard; the youngest son sweeps down the deck. All without bickering, interference, or carelessness . The floating"world of the Shui-jen is a complete one. The Shui-jen, through their self-governing councils, dispense order, charity, and justice with meritorious wisdom. They are extremely law-abiding, and this might be attributed to their reluctance to become involved in shore-side intrigue and mainland laws. Their only legal rebuke from the land seems to stem from overloading their crafts with passengers, or when they accidentally collide with another junk or sampan. Even then, although the Harbor Master will sit in on the resultant hearings, they settle such problems in their own manner and time, with a strict code of etiquette. STARTING THE EXTRACTION PROCESS WHILE THE TIENT'S SON STANDS BY APPREHENSIVELY. The Lady with a Mission Then I heard about Ethel Groce and her old pair of dental forceps. A British journalist, with whom I was having cocktails at the Peninsula Hotel in Kowloon, remarked: "There's a country-woman of yours, a medical missionary, doing a great job among the Shui-jen people in the Yaumati Junk Shelter here. She lives among them in a houseboat." The next morning I was up early and in search of Ethel Groce. The Chinese woman sculler threaded her bum-boat through the watery alleyways between the junks and sampans, and at last she pointed out the mission boat. From some distance away, the Chung Kwong. or Faithful Light, toward which the Shui-jen woman was ferrying me, appeared to be a small godown, or warehouse , on pilings among a cluster of sampans. When I came closer I saw that it was a shipshape houseboat, with blue hull and double-storied white superstructure. Moored alongside was another older houseboat, the Chinese characters designating it as the Po Kwong, the Proclaiming Ligh t, which my ferrywoman informed me by gestures was used as a school classroom and Sunday school. Sampans of converts were crowded all around the two houseboats. In the modern dispensary of the Faithful Light houseboat I found Ethel Groce, well beyond middleage, who at my entrance had a hammer··lock on the head of a howling Shui-jen woman who was about to lose a huge molar. • PA- TIC, JULY, 1976 DISTRIBUTING CALCIUM PILLS TO THE CHILDREN. TIC, JULY, 1976 "Yes, yes, I'm a dentist, too!" Ethel called to me over her shoulder. "I never thought when I was specializing in obstetrics at the Presbyterian Hospital in Chicago that I'd be called upon to pull teeth. Well, one lives and learns, and it helps to be adaptable, especially out here in the Far East." She took a stronger grip and started tugging again. "Make yourself at home , and I'll be with you shortly." I wandered out on the open landing-deck of the Faithful Light, and through the open windows of the adjoining school bo at I could see a crowded classroom of young children, sons and daughters of the Shui-jen, lustily singing a Chinese nursery jingle. They were led by a dark-haired American man, blowing hard upon a shiny trumpet, the valves seemingly manipulated by a small monkey, a clever puppet-glove he had slipped over his hand. Ethel called to me from the doorway of the dispensary's waiting-room, "That's Bill Kinkade tooting the trumpet. His relative Florence Drew organized in 1909 wh at was to become the Oriental Boat Missions." She motioned me to follow her to the upper story of the houseboat. I saw that her once-immaculate white uniform was spattered with blood; there was a trace of weariness in her face. As we climbed the stairway, she said: "I had over 50 patients this morning, running the gamut from a splinter in a big toe to a suspect case of spinal meningitis. Anything major or critical, of course, I must send to the British Government clinic in Kowloon. There were five gum infections and three rough extractions, particularly so that my instruments, forceps, scalers, and explorers are cast-off items, perhaps from the Ark. "The Shui-jen are a rugged race, immune to many common diseases, but they still present an exhaustive medical problem , especially so that I must supply medicines, serums, anti-biotics, vitamins, and dress~ ings free of charge, and a lot of it I'm compelled to buy on the retail market here in Hong Kong." She excused herself to wash up and change her uniform. The living room of the houseboat, in which she left me, had rattan furniture, the cushions were covered with gay tropical-flowered material, and bright curtains fluttered in the windows. There was a table lamp with a base made from an abacus, and Chinese metal filigree artwork was arranged on the walls. "The keel of this houseboat, the Faithful Light, was laid April 1, 1957," Ethel called from her bedroom. "The money to build it came from all over America-$10,000 in all. She was built here in the Kowloon shipyard, and was launched June 29, 1957. The school houseboat, the Proclaimin g Light, was raised from the mud of a river near Canton and towed 9