Southern Indiana Business July-August 2020 | Page 10

Team member Patricia Barefield works at her welding station at Cimtech Inc. in New Albany. Photo by Joe Ullrich ‘People Like It’ Patients are starting to return for appointments at Denzinger Family Dentistry in New Albany, but instead of waiting in the waiting room, they’re hanging out in the parking lot. Signs in the lot and on the front door instruct patients to call upon arrival, wait outside, and they’ll be told when it’s OK to come inside. When they do finally enter the building, they go straight from their vehicles to the dentist’s chair, and when they’re finished, they go right back. “Something we’ve discovered is that people like it,” said Mike Rowe, general manager at the practice. “They like to be able to stay in their cars and look at their phones or listen to the radio.” In fact, he said, they like it so much that the practice is considering keeping it as an option even after it’s no longer required. Inside the building, Dr. Sarah Denzinger-Rowe, a founding dentist at the practice, said they installed UVC germicidal bulbs and electrostatic filters in each of their seven HVAC filters so that the air is constantly being filtered. “It’s cool, I love telling patients about it,” she said. “The fear factor has really affected people, and we need to do whatever we can to make them understand and know that they’re in a safe environment.” Denzinger-Rowe added that the changes they made are good for the type of virus that causes COVID-19. “I think this is here to stay,” she said. “They make us feel safe, our patients appreciate it. They’re confident when they come in.” A worried workforce When Denzinger Family Dentistry reopened, it was deliberate and slow. The first week back, Rowe said, only doctors and senior leadership were allowed in the office, where they served as the guinea pigs for ensuring their safety protocols were viable. “We had doctors answering phones, checking people out,” he said. When they felt confident that the measures they had taken were solid, they allowed employees to return. They also paid “outrageous” prices for personal protective equipment (PPE), including face shields and three different kinds of approved masks, that would make their staff feel confident enough to spend an entire day in a closed-air environment. Although Rowe said he encountered what 10 July / August 2020