For practices that do not only present veneers beautifully, but implement evidence-based approaches in clinical routine: tooth preservation, indication review, material selection, adhesive technique, function, and follow-up. DDJ prepares the study landscape for both practice and patient so a more understandable therapy decision becomes possible.
Team standard, implementation checklist, and practice label
DDJ makes visible which practices present veneer treatment through evidence-based criteria and integrate them into their workflows: tooth structure, enamel, dentin, material, bonding, function, follow-up, and realistic longevity.
The standard: evidence-based dentistry must arrive in treatment
DDJ does not assume that studies only need to be read or information texts improved. What matters is whether relevant criteria are considered before, during, and after treatment, and whether the patient understands why a specific therapy decision follows from them.
Value for patients
Patients receive professional orientation on why veneers, alternatives, or even avoiding veneers may be appropriate depending on the starting point.
They understand the criteria behind the therapy decision: enamel limitation, dentin, bonding, material selection, curing, function, bruxism, follow-up, and realistic longevity.
They can assess practices more intelligently: not by the loudest promise, but by whether relevant decision factors are made understandable.
What practices make visible
The practice shows that veneers are not treated as a purely aesthetic service, but as a medical therapy decision with tooth-structure, function, and material criteria.
The team gets a shared standard for website, patient conversation, treatment planning, follow-up, and aftercare communication.
The DDJ practice profile positions the practice with patients looking for evidence-based orientation, not only the lowest price.
How patients recognize a DDJ veneer practice
DDJ looks for practices that do not merely mention evidence-based approaches, but integrate them into how veneer treatments are presented, planned, and followed up.
Tooth structure first
The practice shows why healthy tooth structure should be preserved whenever possible and how the enamel situation influences the therapy decision.
Dentin is addressed openly
If dentin is exposed, the starting point is not ignored. The practice explains what this means for adhesion, margin quality, technical requirements, and prognosis.
Bonding is a quality factor
Cleaning, etching, silanization, bonding system, isolation, and sufficient light curing are understood as part of treatment quality.
Material is explained
Ceramic, composite, and other options are not presented as one-size-fits-all solutions, but assessed through indication, tooth structure, load, aesthetics, and repairability.
Function is checked
Bite, grinding, clenching, guidance, and load direction are considered because veneers are not only aesthetic, but functionally loaded.
Follow-up is part of it
Check-ups, polishing, splint therapy for bruxism, oral hygiene, and a clear repair pathway are considered part of the treatment pathway.
From wish image to an evidence-based therapy decision
Patients often arrive with an image, a price question, or social-media expectations. DDJ shifts the starting point toward indication, alternatives, tooth structure, risk, and longevity.
The practice receives materials to present its treatment steps through evidence-based criteria: enamel, dentin, bonding, material, curing, function, and follow-up.
A superficial veneer inquiry becomes a better professional orientation because patients understand that veneers can be irreversible and technically demanding therapy decisions.
The practice profile guides patients toward practices that integrate these evidence-based approaches into presentation and workflow.
What practices receive with the DDJ veneer practice package
Highlighted DDJ practice profile
The practice becomes visible as a DDJ veneer practice: with a profile for patients looking specifically for evidence-based orientation on veneer treatments.
24 months of DDJ full access
Access to all DDJ articles plus veneer materials for the team, website, therapy orientation, patient conversation, and follow-up.
Patient handout in 12 languages
Ready for the patient conversation. Enamel limitation, dentin, bonding, material selection, light curing, function, bruxism, follow-up, and realistic longevity are explained clearly.
Therapy guide for the team
Which criteria must be professionally assessed before a veneer decision? What should the patient understand before choosing an irreversible aesthetic treatment?
Veneer checklist for the practice
A short internal standard: alternatives checked, enamel and dentin situation assessed, material justified, bonding protocol understandable, function and bruxism checked, follow-up and repair pathway discussed.
DDJ label for website and patient conversation
A visible DDJ label that shows patients: this practice works with DDJ veneer criteria and makes evidence-based orientation understandable.
Patient pathway
Patients can be pre-informed through DDJ and take the next practice step with a better understanding of indication, alternatives, and risks.
2026 update log
Changes to DDJ materials and wording are tracked so the team stays consistent.
For practices that want to visibly live evidence-based dentistry
DDJ helps practices make the difference between aesthetic wish, medical indication, and professionally grounded therapy decision visible.
Patients should not only know what veneers can look like, but why enamel, dentin, material, bonding, function, and follow-up influence the therapy decision.
The practice shows that veneers are not treated as a shortcut, but as a responsible dental service.
DDJ materials create a shared basis for patient, team, and clinician.
Trust develops when treatment is presented, decided, and followed through understandable criteria.
Why practices use DDJ
DDJ is built for practices that do not want to present veneers through price, discounts, or before-and-after aesthetics alone. The value is an evidence-based foundation for practice and patient: better therapy orientation, fewer misunderstandings, a recognizable DDJ practice profile, and an entry point that starts with indication, tooth structure, alternatives, and realistic limits.
What happens after the request
1. Request practice profile
The practice submits website, location, and desired start date.
2. DDJ checks fit
Practice data, website, treatment focus, and whether DDJ criteria can be appropriately presented and implemented are checked.
3. Onboarding and access
Then DDJ sends the start step, material access, and short onboarding flow for team and practice profile.
4. Practice profile and patient pathway
The practice can use profile, label, and DDJ materials on the website, in patient conversation, therapy orientation, and follow-up.
Request DDJ veneer practice profile
For practices that implement evidence-based veneer approaches, use DDJ materials, and want to become visible with a highlighted practice profile. DDJ will reply with start date, access, and next steps.