Gender
Male
Gender
Male
Location
Framingham, MA
Dental Specialty
Periodontist
Years in Dental Industry
20+ years
About Me
Dr. Cary Feuerman earned his D.M.D. degree with honors from Boston University School of Dental Medicine in 1983. He received several awards for outstanding achievement as a student, including admission into the Omicron Kappa Upsilon Dental Honor Society – a prestigious honor reserved for the top five graduating dental students. Dr. Feuerman also received his specialty training certificate in periodontics at Boston University School of Dental Medicine in 1985. He is an active member in many professional organizations, including the American Dental Association, American Academy of Periodontology, and Massachusetts Dental and Periodontal Societies. He is also a past president of the Metrowest Dental Study Club, an affiliate of the Massachusetts Dental Society. Dr. Feuerman taught in the graduate periodontics clinic at the Boston University School of Dental Medicine, and continues to lecture on a variety of topics including periodontics, esthetic periodontal therapy, dental implant treatment, and bone regeneration. Dr. Feuerman is presently a co-director of the Periodontal Associates Study Club, founded in 1988, which provides continuing dental education for the local community of dental professionals.
Dr. Feuerman has many interests outside of dentistry, and enjoys spending time with his wife, two adult children, and friends.
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Comments
I'm the director of survey and forecast for an economic consulting group that, among other things, conducts surveys for the American Dental Association. Our name is RRC Inc. and we conduct surveys, prepare the dental workforce model and forecast and write academic papers on various dental issues for the American Dental Association.
Once I get the hang of it I figure I'll join both Perio nd implants.
Looking forward to it!
Happy New Year,
bob
thanks for the warm welcome. New Orleans is very interesting to say the least. We recently had interviews for 2010 residents. I'm amazed that I was in that same position 6 months ago. Time REALLY does fly by fast! As I explained to some of the resident hopefuls- This program has not been what I thought it was going to be, BUT I'm glad it wasn't. I had expected to treat the medically compromised patients using crowns, endo and such. We've done a LOT of extractions. The trama we see is usually not very major, but interesting enough to provide EXCELLENT learning experiences. I'd say my oral surgery rotation was the most demanding, but probably the most rewarding when it was all over. I have 6 more months, and and pretty excited to see what else is to come!
Ira