No β periodontal charting does not require two people. With hands-free voice charting, a single hygienist can probe, call out pocket depths, bleeding points, and mobility scores, and have every number land in the correct box in your practice management system without anyone touching a keyboard. The second person β usually a dental assistant pulled off another operatory β becomes optional, not mandatory.
That question matters more than it sounds like it should. Perio charting is one of the few clinical tasks in a dental office still routinely run as a two-person job, and in most schedules the second person is borrowed from somewhere else β often an assistant who could be seating the next patient, taking a scan, or helping the doctor turn a room. If charting can be done solo without slowing the appointment down, that's not a workflow tweak. It's capacity you get back every single day.
Does periodontal charting require two people? Not anymore
The traditional model exists for a reason: probing six sites per tooth while simultaneously typing 168+ numbers into a PMS grid is not realistic for one person to do accurately at speed. So offices default to a caller (hygienist) and a scribe (assistant, or sometimes the hygienist stops probing to type). Voice perio charting removes the bottleneck by listening to the hygienist's spoken numbers β βthree, two, four, bleedingβ β and dropping them directly into the right tooth, surface, and site as she moves around the arch. No relay, no re-reading numbers back, no assistant standing at the monitor.
This isn't a novelty feature bolted onto a perio module. It has to work reliably enough that a hygienist trusts it during a live probing sequence, and it has to write back to your existing PMS chart in real time β not as a PDF you re-enter later. That's the bar we built to on /features, because a voice charting tool that creates a second reconciliation step is worse than no voice charting tool at all.
The staffing math most offices haven't run
Here's what two-person charting actually costs in a typical schedule. A full-mouth periodontal chart covers 6 sites x 28 teeth = 168 probing depths, plus bleeding points and mobility notations β well over 200 discrete data points per patient. Someone has to be present to capture all of it.
- Two-person method: Assistant pulled for ~10 minutes per perio patient to sit at the monitor and enter numbers as they're called out.
- Solo, no voice tool: Hygienist stops probing every few teeth to type, adding roughly 4-5 minutes to the appointment and breaking probing rhythm (which also tends to hurt measurement consistency).
- Solo, with voice charting: Hygienist probes continuously and dictates in real time β no added minutes, no borrowed assistant.
Run the assistant-time math across a real week: 6 perio patients/day x 10 minutes of assistant time = 60 minutes/day pulled from other chairs. Over a 20-day clinical month, that's 20 hours of assistant time β roughly half a work week β spent standing at a monitor instead of chairside on restorative procedures where an assistant's time actually drives production. At a conservative $22/hour assistant wage, that's about $440/month in direct labor cost sitting on perio charting alone, before you even count the opportunity cost of the empty chair that assistant should have been prepping.
Flip it around: give that hygienist back 20 hours a month across the practice, or let the assistant spend those 20 hours seating and prepping instead, and most offices can absorb 1-2 additional patients per day without adding headcount.
What actually happens during a voice-charted perio exam
The hygienist probes as normal, calling out depths per site in a consistent cadence. The system listens, timestamps each reading against tooth and surface position, flags bleeding and suppuration on verbal cue, and populates the periodontal chart live inside your PMS β the same chart your doctor and front desk already look at, not a separate app that needs exporting. When the sequence is done, the hygienist reviews the completed chart on screen, corrects anything by voice or touch, and signs off.
Because it's writing into the PMS chart directly rather than a bolt-on log, everything downstream still works the way it always has: recall intervals, perio-specific letters, and clinical notes generated afterward through /ai-clinical-notes can reference the same exam without anyone retyping findings into a narrative note.
Trend and comparison views
Once charting is fast enough to do at every recall instead of only at initial exams, you actually get usable trend data. Pocket depth and bleeding comparisons pull up side-by-side against the prior 1-3 exams automatically, so a 4mm site that was 2mm eighteen months ago is visible on screen during the appointment β not something someone has to dig up by paging through old charts. That's the difference between charting as documentation and charting as a diagnostic tool the doctor actually uses at the exam.
AAP staging support
Current periodontitis classification (staging and grading per the 2018 AAP/EFP framework) depends on clinical attachment loss, radiographic bone loss, and rate of progression β data that's scattered across the chart, the pano, and the history if you're piecing it together by hand. Voice charting that's connected to full-mouth probing data and prior exams can surface the staging inputs at the point of diagnosis, so the doctor isn't reconstructing a Stage II vs Stage III call from memory between patients.
Where the revenue actually shows up
Faster charting is the labor story. The revenue story is what accurate, consistently-collected perio data catches that a rushed two-person chart misses: bleeding points not called out because the assistant was mid-typing, a distal site skipped because the caller got ahead of the scribe, mobility notes that never made it into the chart at all. Under-documented perio disease doesn't just under-diagnose the patient β it under-supports the SRP or perio maintenance code you eventually need to bill, and it weakens the chart if a claim gets audited.
Once a patient is diagnosed and you're presenting scaling and root planing, per-procedure cost estimates from /auto-insurance-verification let the hygienist or treatment coordinator quote the patient's actual out-of-pocket number for that quadrant before they leave the chair β same visit, same conversation, while the perio finding is still fresh instead of a callback three days later.
What to check before you buy a voice charting tool
- Does it write into your existing PMS chart, or a separate system? A separate system means someone reconciles two records β you've just moved the second-person problem instead of removing it.
- Does it handle real clinic noise? Suction, the patient talking, another hygienist two chairs over β an operatory is not a quiet booth.
- Can the hygienist correct a misheard number without starting over? Voice-to-chart accuracy that requires re-probing a full sextant to fix one digit will get abandoned within a week.
- Does it support your staging workflow, or just log numbers? Raw probing depths without trend and staging context still leave the doctor doing the diagnostic math by hand.
You can see how this fits alongside the rest of a practice's digital workflow β scheduling, intake, insurance verification β on /features, with plan and per-provider pricing detail at /pricing. If you want to see full-mouth charting run in real time on your own PMS rather than a demo dataset, that's what /schedule-a-demo is for.
