
Good Neighbor Podcast: Cooper City
Bringing Together Local Businesses & Neighbors of Cooper City
Good Neighbor Podcast: Cooper City
EP #285: David Amador with Midtown Dental Studio
Join us on a fascinating journey into the world of dental health with David Amador, owner of Midtown Dental Studio, as he shares his unique and innovative approach to dentistry. Discover how David's practice uses inspiration from Disney's legendary customer service to create a calm, anxiety-free environment for patients. He reveals the critical role of understanding each patient's medical history and lifestyle in maintaining optimal dental health, emphasizing prevention as the best treatment.
Explore the evolving landscape of comprehensive dental services as we discuss the importance of communication in building successful patient relationships. David highlights how collaboration between specialists in his practice leads to exceptional care, thanks to advancements in education and training. From root canals to cosmetic options like Botox and aligners, Midtown Dental Studio is committed to providing a wide array of services to improve patients' lives, especially as Florida's leader in SureSmile orthodontic care.
In the final segment, we tackle common dental myths, especially surrounding charcoal toothpaste and fluoride use, with David providing a scientific perspective on the benefits of fluoride in strengthening teeth. We also celebrate the spirit of community support, sharing heartfelt stories of gratitude and philanthropy within the Cooper City community. David underscores the studio's dedication to giving back and fostering meaningful connections, inviting those in need of dental services to experience the warmth and care Midtown Dental Studio offers.
Call: (954) 791-7172
Visit: https://www.midtowndentalfl.com/
Follow: https://www.instagram.com/midtowndentalstudiofl/
This is the Good Neighbor Podcast, the place where local businesses and neighbors come together. Here's your host, Jeremy Wolf.
Speaker 2:Hello, hello, friends, family, great community. We are back with another episode of the Good Neighbor Podcast. Today I'm joined by a very special guest. I often say that, but this is a very special guest because he is a neighbor and he is a local business owner and I recently featured his lovely family in Cooper City Living Magazine. They were the cover story. I'm here with David Amador. David is with Midtown Dental Studio. David, how are you doing, brother?
Speaker 3:Hey, good morning everybody. Good morning Jeremy. It's great to be on the podcast man. I just want to say thank you so much for inviting me to jump on here and get to speak to the community, excited.
Speaker 2:Yeah, brother, happy to have you, and thanks, as always, to our listeners for tuning in to learn more about our great community and the businesses that serve us. So, without further ado, I say this I've had quite a few dentists on the podcast as of late, and I always say this right, everybody knows what a dentist does, but each dental practice has their own flair, if you will. So why don't you start off by talking a little bit about Midtown Dental Studio and your business specifically?
Speaker 3:Yeah, no worries man. No, our office is totally different in the sense and everybody says that you know, you hear now the big talk about health and the food crisis in the sense of what we're eating, in the sense of preventative care, etiology and dental school we are taught one thing there's a problem, fix it but we're not really taught on how to prevent it. So something we do in Midtown that we're very big on is prevention. So we go deep dive and before even doing anything.
Speaker 3:When a patient comes in and we start, you know, going over their medical history. Do they have diabetes? Do they have sleep apnea? Have they been tested for sleep apnea? Why? Because you have a patient that's 30 years old and has grinded a substantial amount of their front teeth down. There are key signs of what could be causing this.
Speaker 3:You know, just doing a night guard as an example does not fix the problem if we don't look back into the past and what's the etiology? And the etiology means what's the cost. So you know what sets us apart is we are always trying to help the patient, prevent the need for dentistry.
Speaker 3:So it comes with education, assessing what the ideology is to each person. And then you know, there's a great book that has nothing to do with dentistry but it has to do great with all business. It's um be our guest. So it was written by a manager, uh, that ran the whole thing for dis for a long time and it's their training program in the sense of customer care. So you know, all dentists have the same thing. We all do the same things, some more than others. We're providing a service, but how can we create the experience to bring down that level and threshold of anxiety? And that's what we really stand for here really to bring down the anxiety, try to prevent future care. And that's what we really stand for here really to bring down the anxiety, try to prevent future care. And that's what Midtown is all about. My partner is my wife, the other dentist, and we have an amazing team here, so we're very grateful for the community.
Speaker 2:Yeah, bringing down the anxiety that I think people have, a certain level of anxiety associated with going to the dentist you had mentioned. You mentioned Disney and be our guest. I guess that's a beauty and the beast frame.
Speaker 3:You know what man it is? Uh, that that's the name of the book and it literally goes through everything that makes them who they are, in the sense of that customer service. Like, wow, they, how they play everything out and that detail. So you know, we take so much of that into our office. You know, right, when you walk in, from the moment you call, from the moment you walk in, from the moment you get your tour, from the moment you sit down, everything is trying to level that experience, bring down the level of anxiety. Because, jeremy, I'm going to say this, one of the things that you talk to any dentist they will say, one of the first things a patient will say it doesn't matter if we know them or not, they'll say listen.
Speaker 3:I know they'll take this against you, but I hate you. I'm telling you, imagine the first time. Imagine, jeremy, the first time I met you, I said I hate you. And it's not you, I just hate Dennis. What did I do? I haven't even spoken yet, and it's because of the anxiety that people have from the past and whatever else has happened, and things like that.
Speaker 2:Yeah, something about, and I've been there before, as many other folks have. I've had some rather questionable and unsettling experiences at the dentist and it's left a lasting impression on me. So when I go in I do feel incredibly anxious, even if I'm going, like you said, I'm going to somebody. I know there's just a certain level of anxiety playing into the equation. But I appreciate what you're doing there and talking about the preventative side of all this, because they say an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.
Speaker 2:I love hearing that from medical professionals, because we're so hardwired in our society to just fix the problem that somebody is having and not address the underlying root cause of these problems, and a lot of it leads back to, you know, the hard things right Lifestyle, diet, exercise, all this stuff that we need to do to form daily habits to be healthy. If you don't do those types of things, you're more likely to have problems. So I love that you're talking about this. I have a good friend of mine who's also a dentist, over at Semide. I don't know if you know Alex Semide. Yeah, so he also preaches very heavily upon the preventative side. And so he also preaches very heavily upon the preventative side, and not just that, also this connection between oral health and your entire systemic care, because it's all like the mouth is the gateway, as he says, to the rest of the body. So I appreciate you handling your practice in that way and raising awareness on that. That's good stuff, man.
Speaker 3:Yeah, without a doubt, like right now, we're trying to. I'm doing a whole campaign right now. You know, everything nowadays is on social media, so right now we're trying to do a correlation between health and and basically, your own environment.
Speaker 3:So you know, patient has diabetes and they you know the number one thing they'll always say is but I don't know why my sugar is high or why I have cavities, I don't eat sugar. Well, there's a consent there. That's where the lack of nutritional education is. You know, a carbohydrate is broken down into sugar in your saliva, so right there there's your sugar. So that's so. If you are controlling and you're diabetic and you are controlling your blood sugar by your diet so if you're using like the level up, you know the level or one of the diet. So if you're using like the level up, you know the level of one of the glucose, with constant monitoring, you're able to monitor and keep your glucose down Then your diet has changed, which that means will correlate to a very high correlation to decrease cavities. That means less problems, less breakdown.
Speaker 2:It's so easy, isn't it why? Why can't we just eat healthy and exercise all the time? It's so easy to get caught up in our fast-paced society. I say all the time. I'll go through a week with the family where I I cook every night and we all sit down together and have great meals and I said I went, I just need to do this all the time and then the next week it's. It's eating out every night.
Speaker 3:It's it's so difficult. Like you know, when I up, I used to be 300 plus pounds growing up. What are you looking at? Oh yeah, and it was just the diet. You know it was always carbs and the abundance of it and frequency, but at the same time, you know it's all. We have to look at our past Same thing and once you know the 2190 rule I always talk about with my team 2190 rule yeah, so it takes 21 days to form a habit, 90 days to set it.
Speaker 3:Okay, so we're too quick to like, okay, I'm gonna go clean for this or I'm gonna try to change. It's like little nuances before I know. You can get past that 90 days. They become consistent and then you do a little different. A little different, that's not you know. That's how we were able to change my life around. It has to do also the same thing with anxiety. Me and my wife both became dentists because both sides of our family high anxiety patients hate the dentist, never wanted to go and it was like all right, how can we help patients, or how can we help the general public?
Speaker 3:Just becoming another MD will do so much, but what is a field that everybody hates?
Speaker 1:And in our family they hated the dentist and both of us are charismatic.
Speaker 3:Both of us are good with people. Both of us you know uh are able to stand in front and stand in front of a crowd and talk.
Speaker 2:So it was like all right, this is a no brainer, we can change this, so I wanted to dig into that a little more, because you mentioned that you're in practice with your wife. Did you know each other both before you got into dentistry or did you meet after the fact? Talk a little bit about the journey that led you up to starting Midway Dental with your wife.
Speaker 3:Oh yeah, so I'm just a good old floor boy, born and raised in the Southwest ranches in the area, grew up watching Cooper City go from zero to something, Watched it blow up. I remember going fishing right where back in the day, going fishing all the time where the bonefish is off of Weston Road and right back there. That was like my. I'd go back there with my three, right back there. That was like my.
Speaker 3:I go back there with my three-wheeler and that was like the hidden honey hole which now you'll see all the birds going shooting some, you know, going not golfing, but shooting some some balls over a tin cup growing up years ago. But my wife was from Orange County, not Florida, orange, california. So we met in dental school. So, fun fact, my brother's also a dentist out of Hollywood and they were the class below me. So when my brother started, that's when we met and we became friends. And then, before you know it, you know the hard call, the hard conversation came about. Well, hey, we're living together and, you know, soon going to graduate I'm going back to Florida. What's the deal here? Well, fast forward. Here we are man, two kids and a thriving business serving the community.
Speaker 2:Good stuff, man. So I want to ask you, as somebody that works with your wife, what would you say is one of the most I'm going to go both sides of the spectrum here one of the most challenging things about working with your wife and one of the most on the other side of that spectrum, one of the most rewarding things about working with your wife.
Speaker 3:Challenging thing I would say is like you got to leave home home, like if the kid's given issues and there's an issue with how we're trying to get the kids, because we've got a three and a four-year-old and you got any of that because it picked one, that when you walk in the door the patients come first and you know, luckily, just open communication and always working at communication, like as a husband and wife. Success to a relationship is communication. Doesn't matter if it's good, bad yeah, the bad stuff has to be said not bottled up. So since we up, so since we really try to practice at home, no relationship is perfect. I'm going to be honest here, jeremy. There are times that we write.
Speaker 2:Hey, hey, hey, hey. My relationship is absolutely perfect. Speak for yourself. I got no problems. None whatsoever.
Speaker 3:Sometimes I feel like I'm in quality control and the product is me and all I'm hearing is like bad things, and then good things come in. I'm like all right, I got a five-star review, the product is doing good.
Speaker 1:That's hilarious.
Speaker 3:I like that Because of that conversation and that communication of the two different ways we come together to raise our child and find a common path. It allows us to venture into the office. So when we come into the office, the benefit of that is, since it's two doctors, I will stray more towards the surgical aspect and reconstruction, while we both work on etiology, while she'll go into the different aspect of alignment and Botox and cosmetics, so we're both able to complement each other. So then we were able to collaborate on how we can help the patient.
Speaker 2:Wow. So I wanted to get into that also the types of services that you're offering. So it sounds like you're offering kind of soup to nuts. You're running the gamut, you're doing everything. You just mentioned Botox as well, yeah.
Speaker 3:So you know, back in the days, if, if we, if we digress and we go back like maybe 15 years ago, um, you know, you would go to the dentist and if you needed a root canal you had to go to a specialist. If you needed to take it out you had to go to a specialist. Well, in this common day, you can go to an oral surgeon. Oral surgeons are only placing a handful of implants in school, depending on where they go.
Speaker 3:Now they are doing cancer surgeries and everything else, but the majority of things that implant that surgeons are doing are placing implants, doing all on x and they take the same courses most dentists are doing now. Um, so a lot of things now what we call in our field is called a super gp that there's so many courses, super, super gp, super general, dentist, super general where they get out of dental school and you go right back to school. So, outside of dental school, me and my wife put into ourselves within the last four years almost three hundred thousand dollars just in further education, where now it's specific on one thing could have been root canals, could have been, could have been implants, could have been Botox, could have been fillers, could have been aligners, which is a clear braces. You know specific things. That way, to help boost the overall community Because that's where patients usually fall through is when you say, hey, we're going to refer you to X, y, z. Patient leaves, life hits, they don't get the care they need. They come back in.
Speaker 2:Something has broken down because they did not get that service that they needed. You just mentioned I thought you said something about Invisalign, so you're doing orthodontic work as well, yeah, so we stay within Clear Liners.
Speaker 3:We're actually SureSmile provider, which is like an Invisalign, and we're actually Florida's number one provider this year. So that became a big deal for us because that just means, you know, it's not so much being the number one provider for SureSmile, which is a massive company, but it's the fact that we've been able to change so many lives. You know, when we talk about teeth being aligned, it's like your car tires, you know. Except we only get one set of tires the teeth that we have. After that we're just replacing. So when you have a patient that's 30 years old, we're crowding everywhere and it's shaved down so much of his tooth structure it's like, hey, if we don't fix this, it's only going to get worse by the time it gets 60, you're talking about no more veneers, a lot of crowns, thousands of dollars.
Speaker 3:that does not last forever.
Speaker 2:I wanted to ask you about some of the most common things that you hear in practice from patients in terms of myths or misconceptions that your patients typically have surrounding what you do at your practice.
Speaker 3:Oh, man, that's a general question. We're going to have to go a little bit more deep than that because I can go into like but, doc, I oil pull for 10 minutes. I'm like you can do that with soap and you get the same results. There's clinical research in there, or luckily this one's calmed down. I'll throw down one that's a misconception that got big on TikTok was the charcoal toothpaste.
Speaker 2:Charcoal toothpaste. Elaborate on that. What is charcoal toothpaste?
Speaker 3:It is a black toothpaste that was really big about two years ago and it has charcoal in it. You know charcoal is used for a lot of things and it's actually beneficial in a lot of different ways, but not to brush your teeth. It does make your teeth white. But imagine if you were to go into your garage or Home Depot and get 60 grit sandpaper. Oh, you're going to take off all that staining on the outside, but you're going to make the teeth porous where now it picks up more stain. So you're just to make the teeth porous where now it picks up more staining. So they were just.
Speaker 3:You're just sanding away your teeth and sooner or later the teeth do become yellow because you start wearing into the dentin increased sensitivity. So luckily that trend has started to dissipate. But man, we still have patients that'll come in and be like I like to work on my wife's smile by brushing with charcoal toothpicks, and that's when it's like yeah, we need to have a conversation about that let's just sit down and let's talk about not meeting the nears down the road because of X, y, z, and it's just.
Speaker 3:you know. You see, somebody else do it. I just like kids, so somebody else does it, without any rhyme or reason.
Speaker 2:I got one for you. I'm curious here. I know dentists typically push fluoride treatment and I'm curious about that because if you read about the other side of that I guess the holistic space and the spiritual community they talk about fluoride. I've heard fluoride, it closes off your third eye, that kind of thing. Could you talk a little bit about the efficacy of fluoride in treatment and how that works, and maybe kind of steel man the argument that, because I've been curious about this for a while, steel man, the argument about how it closes your third eye, and all that from the spiritual side?
Speaker 3:Yeah, so the third eye. I cannot speak for that. I can speak about the medical aspect of it and I can speak, like you know, germany has it as a neurotransmitter. They do not allow it in Germany, in Europe and everywhere else they do. It's all about the quantity. Like anything in excess is not good.
Speaker 3:So here it's heavily regulated by the amount of dosage in which you can Fluoride. How fluoride works is it literally replaces the hydrogen within the actual. So it's hydroxyapatite which is the foundation of a tooth and it replaces. When it's placed onto the tooth, it actually helps change the molecular formula to hydroxyfluoride. So, basically, wrapping it up, it makes the tooth stronger in the sense and it decreases the acidity level of the tooth needs to break down. So why do we use it and why do we recommend it? So, yes, there is the whole circle effect where fluoride is put in water and most likely into our water system. So the vegetables you have and things you eat that are clean with it, you're getting it into your system. When you buy bottled water. No, you're not having that when you use toothpaste. But the issue with toothpaste is most people don't read the instructions. And what do they do right after they brush? They spit it out and then they rinse. So all the benefits in which they would have had is gone, and it's the same thing with hydroxyapatite. So instead of fluoride, there's other ones that use calcium or hydroxyapatite any of the medicine that's in there to help with sensitivity or decrease cavities. If you rinse right after you brush, it's gone. So we always recommend floss, rinse, then brush.
Speaker 3:But back to the conversation of fluoride. The reason we talk about it, we use it, is because we consider there are different types of cavity risks. So patients that walk in and this is straight from the ADA, american Dental Association, and how it goes is either you're high, medium or low. What would make a person a high risk, jeremy, if you have had fillings in the past on more than three teeth, those sooner or later are going to break down. The question is do you get five years, 10 years, 15 or 20? Does the filling, because of the adhesive, go bad or do you get a cavity between the connection of filling and tooth, which is the most common because we didn't address the etiology? So a fluoride does is help fortify that area and decrease the chance of breakdown.
Speaker 3:So, going to the third eye, that I can't answer, but we but we do recommend it in the sense of use, where it's highly regulated on the, on the percentage that's there, it is stronger than in office than if you were to use it at uh, use toothpaste, things like that, and it helps just decrease because at the end of the day, if you've known anybody that's gone to an orthopedic and what I'm saying is I hear it all the time- I just got my knee done.
Speaker 3:The orthopedic said expect five to ten years for a revision. You know the word revision well. The moment something happens to your tooth, expect to have a revision. The question is you have the power in your hands to prevent that revision for an extended amount of time?
Speaker 2:I'm going to have to dig into that a little more on my own. I don't know what the rationale is behind that the whole idea of the fluoride affecting the third eye. But I'm going to look into that a little bit further because I have friends that are big into that space and they tell me don't use fluoride. I'm like why not? And they can't really explain exactly why it is.
Speaker 3:So yeah, you won't find a long-term study stating anything like that, so that's the reason why. So then I become either subjective or case-based.
Speaker 2:Well, I'm going to dig into that more and I'm going to do another podcast episode with my friend and we're going to talk all about that from the other side and see how that goes.
Speaker 3:Definitely, man, hey and you know what? That's the one thing, the beauty of it, like the beauty of choice and being able to choose. What. There's a beautiful thing about mind and placebo, and I'm not saying anything else, but when you believe something and you are set in it, then you know what you need to follow it, because that can really throw your chi off, that can really throw off your inner core.
Speaker 1:So without a doubt.
Speaker 3:If you read something or something, you believe it to that point you've got to follow through with it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, absolutely so. I had the pleasure of meeting your wife and your lovely children over at I think the first time we ran into each other was over at Botanica Organica. Yeah, I was doing a yoga class over there and you were picking up some stuff. Shout out to Fruits and Cahoots and Organica Botanica.
Speaker 3:Is it?
Speaker 2:Botanica Organica or Organica Botanica? I always confuse it.
Speaker 3:I think it's Organica Botanica, because they sell plants there and everything yeah.
Speaker 2:So one of the wonderful things about that I love about our community here in Cooper city is it's very family centered. There's so many kids here. The schools are great. I'm so happy I moved over here four years ago. I was just right down the road in Davie but now, just being in this community, there's a certain a feel about Cooper city. Tell us a little bit about your family and your experience here in the community.
Speaker 3:Without a doubt, man, the easiest way is when we bought the house. It was supposed to be our first transitional house in Cooper City. We bought it in 2019. We're like this will be an investment property in the sense of this will be our first home that we buy. It looks like a thousand to a million where they talk about buy your first house, live in it and get equity and buy another one. You know we're thinking down that mindset, not no more. Like the community, our neighbors, such good friends with all of our neighbors Like here I send. You know one of my neighbors actually he's a cop, chad. I love you man. He actually, him and his wife actually saved our daughter. She was having a seizure. Let me tell you, as physicians, when it's your kids, when something happens, you just go brain dead.
Speaker 2:Panic, panic, you freeze up Yep.
Speaker 3:So I ran out the door in my boxers and they're putting stuff up for Halloween and they came running over and I knew exactly what to do. But brain dead. And they helped out. She had stopped breathing for about there, you know, almost about a solid minute. They called friends, fire rescue was over within a not even 60 seconds. Fire rescue was there. Everything was fine, everything. But that's the level of community. My neighbor, chris, helps us out all the time with any issues with our vehicles or with our dogs, and we're always and we'll even get together in the winter and we'll do a bonfire in the front with all the all the local dads that live in on my block just to catch up. So this level of community I didn't have when I was growing up in southwest ranches I grew up in southwest ranches.
Speaker 3:If your neighbor was over to your house, something was wrong. Yeah, like either your dog got out, they grew up on a horse farm, your horse got through the fence, or something like nobody was there wasn't community like that and here man we know everybody, everybody knows us, everybody knows me with my big truck. Everybody comes over hey doc.
Speaker 3:I saw you on youtube. You know there's always a banter going on with even the people that walk by. They all know us, we always talk and now it's it just became our forever spot yeah, something about the community.
Speaker 2:It just has that feel. And I have a similar story. I sold my house in davie and this was supposed to be kind of transitional. Right around the same time I think it was 2020, ish in the midst of covid we moved over here and, yeah, we're hooked, we don't want to go anywhere.
Speaker 3:We're just kind of plugged in here and and we're happy where we're at right now and it's fantastic like when you watch those old movies from back in the day, like you'd see this group of people in the community, like before cell phones, before before distractions. You see everybody sit there together and they sit outside on the weekend watch the kids run around and it's not like that as much anymore but there's still that constant connection.
Speaker 3:You know me and our neighbors were always sending each other texts, like you know that cop I was talking about. I sent him things about smoking meat all day long and on last Saturday he walked up and he was like just got a new smoker. I was like, well, I'm cooking a piccagna here. You got to try this piccagna. All right, we got to go back to our families. Each of us got people over, but it's good to have your meat, my wife's like you guys are crazy.
Speaker 2:No way, man. You need to let me know next time you guys are smoking a brisket out there. I got to come by and sample the fare.
Speaker 3:Yeah, man. And now he's like sending me these links on this one company where if you buy their grill, it's like $750. But if you buy the grill, they give you five grills broken up within 25 years. Every five years they send you a new one. I'm like, oh man, that sounds a little questionable. He's like don't worry, I bought one, I'll give you mine after five years.
Speaker 2:All right, I'll give you meat Interesting stuff Before we wrap this one up. Why don't you share? You're chock full of wisdom. I can see why don't you share with our listeners. It could be, I guess, one thing you'd like them to know. It could be about your business, or it could just be a piece of a nugget of wisdom, some life lesson, just something what comes to mind that you want to share with folks. You know what.
Speaker 3:I think you know usually is where somebody would put their like the little ploy for their business and everything. I just want to say, man, I want to be thankful for the Cooper city community. They have been super grateful with us.
Speaker 3:They you know from the fire department and the police officers helped me with my family when I had emergencies because my daughter has gone to the memorial. I've had the ambulance in front of our house about five times with that growing up. So I really want to thank the community because the response, the way they give way, not in every community do you watch a fire department come out and everybody stop and actually give way. If you grew up and you go down to Hialeah, a police officer can try to go through crowd, nobody moves. You know a ambulance is trying to get to save someone's life. Nobody moves or gives away because it's all about them and the community really stand up for themselves. When you see other neighbors helping each other when they're preparing for a hurricane or things like that. You know Cooper City, don't give up on that man. Don't give up on that man. Don't give up on your fellow neighbor. Let's bring the community vibe back and let's show people how they should be.
Speaker 2:I love it. I love it. Isn't it wild how, when you take the focus off yourself and you just focus on others, magical things start to happen in your life? We're wired as human beings to be self-centered and self-driven and it's hard to detach from that. But when you truly take when you're having even when you're having a tough time with something, if you go and try to help somebody else with something, it naturally just makes you feel better and that's one of the things that's so great about our community and some people like they hear that and they see that and they're like, what are they selling?
Speaker 3:What do they want? But in reality, man, it's like we do a lot of. We just finished up our philanthropic and we always do. Every quarter our team comes together and they pick a case, they pick somebody that we want to help and we provide we do pro bono services in the office.
Speaker 3:And we don't publicize this or talk about this, because this is something that we do, it's one of our visions for our office, and she was here yesterday, the wrap-up of a case that took about three months to finish. A lot of stuff was done, we were able to for she to eat, smile and have this joy, and her family was here. I was like why do you guys do this? You guys didn't even't we don't film any of it for social media.
Speaker 2:You know, if anything, there's a little bit of pictures and stuff like that we'll take, but we don't make the big propaganda out of it and they're like why are you doing this is because we want to give back.
Speaker 3:We've always done uh, we were doing we used to do for a long time um, trips to dominican with different groups. But it's like, why go so far if there's people here in our community that need the help? So you know, we do it just because that's the beauty of giving back and the care and if we take care of and if you take care of others, sooner or later that does come back around. It always comes back.
Speaker 2:Yep, yep, full circle, my friend, full circle. So for anyone out there that's listening, that is looking for a good dentist, maybe they're not comfortable where they're at. Maybe something you said throughout this conversation resonated with them. What is the best way for them to reach out to you or to learn more? Maybe share your website or contact information. Let us know how we can get in touch.
Speaker 3:Yeah, easy thing. Look up Midtown Dental, uh, florida, or midtown dental studio plantation on google. You'll see us pop up right away almost 800 google reviews and we're in plantation. The number is 954-791-7172. Um, we're here to help anything you need.
Speaker 2:If you just anything whatsoever, we're here to help out, perfect then we, if you just anything whatsoever, we're here to help out Perfect. Then we will of course, drop some links in the description below to all of your contact information so folks out there can connect if they'd like. David Pleasure having you on the show, brother, it was a nice having this opportunity to dig in and get to know a little bit more about you. So thanks for joining us.
Speaker 3:Definitely, jeremy. Have yourself a wonderful day, take care of the community.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you too, brother. Thanks everyone for listening and we will catch you all next time on the next episode of the Good Neighbor Podcast. Everyone, take care.
Speaker 1:Thanks for listening to the Good Neighbor Podcast Cooper City. To nominate your favorite local business to be featured on the show, go to GNPCooperCitycom. That's GNPCooperercitycom. That's gnpcoopercitycom, or call 954-231-3170.