11 : The DNA Examiner Who Became a Dentist: Dr. Todd Crandall of Comfort Dental Durango
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Dr. Todd Crandall was not planning on dentistry. He had a master’s degree, eight years as a forensic DNA examiner, four kids, and a salary that required him to call his dad when his car got a flat tire. At 37, he decided to change careers. He graduated from CU Dental in 2016, moved to Durango with his wife and five kids, and opened Comfort Dental there in 2018.
Before he opened, he and his wife called every dental office in town to ask whether they accepted Medicaid. Two did. Both had a year-long waiting list. That gap is why he came to Durango.
In this episode, Shawn sits down with Dr. Crandall to talk about what his practice actually looks like from the patient’s side. About 60% of his patients are on Medicaid. About 60% of his staff are Navajo. His office sees patients within days, sometimes the same day. He explains how the Comfort Dental Gold Plan works for patients without insurance and what the real price difference is compared to a private dental office.
He also talks about the patients who waited too long and what it cost them. He talks about dental fear, the 50-50 split between financial avoidance and bad past experience, and what he tells patients who haven’t seen a dentist in years. He shares a case where 18 months of facial pain resolved in two days with a tiny occlusal adjustment. And he talks about the sailboat he has been restoring in South Carolina, the family’s upcoming trip up the Intracoastal Waterway, and the one word he hopes his patients use when they describe him.
What you’ll hear in this episode:
- Why a forensic DNA examiner went to dental school at 37
- What convinced Dr. Crandall to open a practice in Durango
- How Comfort Dental handles same-day and emergency access
- What the Gold Plan costs and who it’s for
- Why 50% of dental avoidance comes down to past bad experiences
- What patients with no insurance actually pay for a crown
- The 18-month facial pain case that resolved in two days
- What makes the Durango practice culture different from other offices
- The sailboat in South Carolina and the coastal trip coming this spring