“If your software went down right now, who in your office actually knows what to do?”
That question makes a lot of dental practices uncomfortable, and it should.
Too many smaller offices assume downtime planning is something only hospitals need. It is easy to think, “We are not a giant health system,” or “If something breaks, we will figure it out.” But when your practice management system, imaging software, phones, internet, or EHR goes down, patient care, scheduling, billing, prescriptions, charting, and team communication can all slow down or stop at once.
Hospitals may have larger attack surfaces, but smaller practices often have fewer backups, fewer layers of redundancy, and fewer people who know how to keep operations moving during an outage. That means a disruption that feels “temporary” can quickly become a full-office emergency.
In a dental office, downtime is not just an inconvenience. It can affect the day’s schedule, treatment notes, radiographs, medical histories, insurance verification, payment processing, referral coordination, and patient communication.
A practice cannot honestly say it is prepared for emergencies if it has no plan for losing access to critical systems.
That does not mean creating a 50-page binder no one reads. It means building a simple, usable process for what happens when the screen goes dark.
At minimum, your office should know:
- who declares downtime
- how staff communicate during the outage
-which functions are prioritized first
- where paper forms and backup workflows live
- how appointments, clinical notes, and payments are handled manually
- how leadership communicates status updates
- when normal operations can safely resume
One of the most overlooked ideas in downtime planning is this: a written plan is not the same thing as a practiced plan.
The best-run practices rehearse outages before they happen.
That does not require a major production. A 20-minute tabletop exercise can reveal gaps immediately:
People do not rise to the level of the plan they wrote. They fall back on the workflow they have actually practiced.
When systems fail, confusion spreads faster than facts.
That is why communication triage matters. Staff need to know where updates come from, who is making decisions, and what the current priority is. Without that, every team member invents their own response, and small problems become operational messes.
A dental practice should predefine:
Downtime planning fails when only the office manager or IT vendor knows the procedure.
Every team member should know the basics. Front desk, assistants, hygienists, doctors, and billing staff all need role-specific guidance for how to function when digital systems are unavailable. The goal is not perfection. The goal is calm, safe continuity.
Training turns downtime from a panic event into a managed process.
If your practice has no downtime procedure today, do not overcomplicate the fix.
Start with one page:
Then test it.
Because downtime procedures are not for hospitals only. They are for any healthcare practice that wants to keep serving patients when technology stops cooperating.
And that includes yours.
At SMART Solutions, we help practices build downtime procedures that work in the real world, not just on paper. If your office does not have a tested plan for system outages, now is the time to create one before the next disruption forces you to improvise.