Dental AI guide

Treatment Plans Are Where Revenue Meets Risk

Treatment plans are sales tools too — so staff reach for AI to make them more persuasive. But a plan doesn't stop being health information because you're using it to sell.

Treatment plans are also conversion tools, so staff push them into ChatGPT or Canva to make them warmer and more persuasive. But a treatment plan does not stop being patient health information because the practice is using it to sell. The sales motive is exactly what drives the data out of the system.

No patient data required. Use these guides for practice workflow education, not patient-specific advice.

A treatment plan does not stop being patient health information because the practice calls it sales.

This is general educational material for dental practice owners and staff, not legal advice. This guide covers the sales/revenue angle; the Treatment Plans: Stop The Spread guide covers the privacy/spread side of the same documents.

Two privacy laws apply in NSW. As well as the Commonwealth Privacy Act 1988 and its Australian Privacy Principles (APPs), dental practices in NSW are also bound by the NSW Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002 (HRIP Act) and its Health Privacy Principles (HPPs). Read the considerations here against both. General information, not legal advice.

Why this matters

The treatment plan is one of the highest-value documents in the practice. It is also a sales document — it is how a practice presents recommended care, fees and finance, and a big lever on production and case acceptance.

That sales pressure is exactly what drives the risk. When the goal becomes "lift acceptance", staff reach for tools to help:

  • Pasting the plan into ChatGPT to "make this warmer / more persuasive".
  • Dropping it into Canva or a design tool to make it look better.
  • Using Word/email AI to rewrite the wording.
  • Sending it through marketing tools for follow-up campaigns.

Every one of those is the extraction cycle: a document full of patient name, clinical context and finances leaves the protected system to be "improved" for conversion.

The line that matters

A treatment plan does not stop being health information because the practice calls it sales.

The patient's name, their diagnosis, the proposed treatment and the costs are health and personal information whether the document is sitting in the clinical record or being polished for acceptance. The privacy obligations (APPs and the NSW HPPs) travel with the content, not with what the practice intends to use it for.

Also in the full guide

  • Lift acceptance without extracting patient data
  • Quick self-check

Optional — get a customised version

Request the version adapted for your practice

The guide above is free to read and download. If you would like a version tailored to your practice workflow, leave your details below. Use practice-level details only. Do not include patient names, treatment details, clinical notes, X-rays, invoices or identifiable emails.