Dentists calling themselves Doctors

Gobtists, I was in the chair today actually having a clean and had a wisdom tooth out 3 weeks back. £247 for that so I call them robbers.
 
I am a doctor - I save lives.

I am not a dentist - they clean teeth, and earn more than me.

I don't call myself a dentist, they shouldn't call themselves doctors. Simples :D

You're in the wrong field of medicine then.

Gobtists, I was in the chair today actually having a clean and had a wisdom tooth out 3 weeks back. £247 for that so I call them robbers.

I had one of my wisdom teeth out three weeks ago (odd coincidence that) and guess what? Cost me the huge sum of £0. You lose.
 
Run that past me again?

Work in a field of medicine that pays more than dentists. :) It's tongue-in-cheek anyway. I value people who work to help others. I owe my life many a time over to those in the medical profession that work in tough conditions.

Mine was £0 too, but I tipped them as I am Housey. :D

Top left out, yours?

Bottom left.
 
Well at least they're not chiropractors calling themselves doctors.

Most GPs in the UK call themselves Dr without having earned a doctorate - the medical profession has done it for a while now - I don't see why dentists can't too.

Indeed, as I understand it a Doctor in a medical setting could be an honorary title granted after obtaining a bachelor of medicine degree, or a postgraduately trained specialised MD (using the title Mr) or a doctorate PhD.

The point is, I guess, not what you are entitled to call yourself but what the patient hears/understands. Does a dental patient confuse his dentist's title of "Doctor" when used in a medical setting, with the usual meaning of Doctor? The ASA seems to think that is the case.
 
I am a doctor - I save lives.

I am not a dentist - they clean teeth, and earn more than me.

I don't call myself a dentist, they shouldn't call themselves doctors. Simples :D

I reckon firemen and paramedics should be called doctor too then.

People only refer to your job as 'doctor' because your profession decided to use the title to give themselves some status many years ago. Its only an honorary title if you've not actually earned a doctorate. If the medical profession can chose to use an honorary title they've not earned then why not dentists too?
 
The point is, I guess, not what you are entitled to call yourself but what the patient hears/understands. Does a dental patient confuse his dentist's title of "Doctor" when used in a medical setting, with the usual meaning of Doctor? The ASA seems to think that is the case.

I think the ASA ought to crack down more on alternative medicine practicioners tbh...

I doubt many members of the public are going to ask the dentist for general medical advice and I doubt many dentists would give it. So long as their advertising makes it clear they are dentists then I don't see the issue.

alternative medicine types on the other hand....
 
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