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No one can
practice orthodontics for any period of time without encountering
the need to compromise treatment on occasion. Financial limitations
often dictate a compromise approach, not to mention a number of
other factors such as poor hygiene, low IQ, disabilities, distance
in travel, etc.
There are many so-called compromise approaches. Often, when
compromise treatment is completed, it is no longer observed as a
compromise. Sometimes, the result is preferable to what might have
taken place had the “ideal” approach, as recommended by a surgeon
or another orthodontist, been followed. These experiences have lead
to treatment procedures that can be debated as having been
compromised or non-compromised from a dental viewpoint, but
certainly not from the patient’s point-of-view.
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