The odd thing here is that in the US, dentists work more like you expect doctors to in Mexico.
You can generally go to any arbitrary dentist and ask "how much does procedure X cost?", and get an itemized estimate that will be very close to what you actually pay. I have never heard of paying to be a "member" first.
It was explained to me that the reason dentists operate differently is that historically very few people had dental insurance (either their plan didn't offer it or they declined coverage), so dentists developed fair pricing and kept price lists so their patients would know if they could afford a particular procedure. Now that dental insurance is common, the practice remains because most plans have a yearly maximum, so if you need expensive work done (e.g., multiple implants), the dentists/oral surgeons will work with you to schedule work so you are only billed up to your yearly maximum.
It's far from a panacea but it works better than the medical insurance system.
You can generally go to any arbitrary dentist and ask "how much does procedure X cost?", and get an itemized estimate that will be very close to what you actually pay. I have never heard of paying to be a "member" first.
It was explained to me that the reason dentists operate differently is that historically very few people had dental insurance (either their plan didn't offer it or they declined coverage), so dentists developed fair pricing and kept price lists so their patients would know if they could afford a particular procedure. Now that dental insurance is common, the practice remains because most plans have a yearly maximum, so if you need expensive work done (e.g., multiple implants), the dentists/oral surgeons will work with you to schedule work so you are only billed up to your yearly maximum.
It's far from a panacea but it works better than the medical insurance system.