
Dr. Mario Garita - Costa Rica Dentist and Implant Specialist
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Costa Rica Dentist In Paradise (Escazu) Saved Me $18,000
Ron Laytner - Edit International
As dental prices skyrocket world-wide, thousands save by turning to dentists in paradise. I was sitting in a plush leather operating chair in the office of a wealthy Florida dentist, his waiting room filled with anxious patients, reception manned by three women working phones and billing. In came the dentist, gray-haired, impeccably dressed, Gucci shoes and shirt, French tie matching his convertible Mercedes outside. He opened his hands wide flashed a gold Rolex, gave a little bow and with a hunter's smile, asked "How can I help you?"
I didn't know yet but he would set me off on a journey of thousands of miles and bring me to rain forests and volcanoes. I've been a globe-trotting foreign correspondent for decades. I'd lost a tooth here and a tooth there. I remembered a dentist in a Mexican village, pumping his foot up and down on an old sewing-machine-like treadle, powering a slow drill cutting agonizingly into a now long-lost tooth. A molar had disappeared in Cairo to an Egyptian wearing a wine-red fez.
I realized now in Florida the years had taken their toll. I needed a lot of work. For the next hour and a half the US dentist took x-rays and went over all the work I needed. Finally, with the help of an assistant, he began tallying up the cost on a large calculator with big bright green numbers. The total came to an unbelievable $24,000. My wife and I were aghast. I said we'd think it over but could he please help me first with the pain in my tooth - the reason I'd come in the first place? Could I have a temporary filling so I wouldn't be in pain all weekend? He checked his Rolex, frowned and said sorry, there was no time. He wanted $24,000 up front this job was too big for payments and yet he wouldn't take the time to stop my pain? I decided to look elsewhere maybe a foreign country and I would use the magic of the internet.
I'd heard somewhere that dentists were very inexpensive and good in Costa Rica, modern Mexico and South Africa. I had bad memories of Mexican dentists. South Africa was too far away. I'd try Costa Rica. In a one-sixth of a second search the internet revealed that: 'cosmetic/restorative dentistry is a major industry in the small Central American country, that each year thousands of men and women visit San Jose, the capital, taking advantage of the low-cost, high-quality care provided by Costa Rica's cosmetic surgeons and dentists, that more than 14% of all visitors to Costa Rica come there for some kind of medical care'.

Before and after Dr. Mario went to work...
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Featured prominently was someone known as Dr. Mario Garita, a 'world-renowned expert in implants' and reconstructive dental surgery'. It said he was trained at the University of Miami. But was the internet telling the truth? I spoke to Dr. Mario on his cell phone. In perfect English he told me to send my x-rays and he'd get back to me with a price. Was he really as good as he said? My tooth was still hurting and I went to a specialist in Fort Lauderdale who stopped the pain for one thousand dollars. He warned me not to go to Costa Rica, that I'd end up with a mouthful of bad work. He told me he'd check Dr. Mario out but never did. I bought two affordable round-trip tickets on American Airlines from Miami to Costa Rica and set out with my wife into the unknown world of foreign dentistry. Dr. Mario arranged for us to stay at a place called Villa Plenitude, run by a Canadian, Ron Blache-Fraser. I had visited Fraser's website and his place looked good. Once in Costa Rica, we discovered his recovering hotel was far from downtown San Jose, perched on the edge of a high canyon with a river far below. The rooms were nice, the view, magnificent, the food great.
Next morning the Canadian drove us to San Jose and we entered a small security-barred and gated building on a busy street and climbed to the second floor. There was only one girl at the desk and just one person in the waiting room, Walter Ferrari, an American from Texas. While I waited for Dr. Mario Garita to arrive I questioned him carefully. His wife Daisy had been here before and had eleven implants at a ridiculously low price. He smiled and showed me a movie star mouth and told me I'd just love Dr. Mario. Dr. Garita is an implant specialist; his wife a cosmetic dentist, his father, a pioneer root canal specialist in Central America and a younger brother an orthodontist. When he arrived Dr. Mario flashed a dazzling smile to my wife and took us into his office. We sat under a wall of diplomas showing he'd indeed graduated from the University of Miami Medical Center at Jackson Memorial Hospital specializing in implant surgery and oral reconstruction.
His operating room contained exactly the same modern tech expensive equipment used by the 'Rolex watch' dentist in Florida. Dr. Mario, after taking his own high tech digital x-rays began work on me right away. He started by making impressions of what teeth I still had, then went confidently through my mouth like a landscaper clearing a field, removing my failing crowns and bridges and going after tooth decay. Then he put in temporary teeth. Dr. Mario was totally relaxed and supremely confident. We came to his office for three days in a row then he told us to take a holiday in Costa Rica and come back in three more days.
We changed hotels to be near his office and ended up at the romantic Las Cumbres Inn, a magnificent villa on a mountain-side overlooking all of San Jose and two volcanoes. It was run by Elke Arends, a lovely German-born Costa Rican, who specializes in hosting recovering surgical patients. Next we hired a driver and van for who took us across the country 100 miles away on the adventurous road to Arenal Volcano. We sat back and relaxed as he dealt with winding mountain curves and soaring straight-aways past coffee plantations in the breath-taking countryside for which Costa Rica is famous. On this rare day huge active Arenal volcano, which is usually covered by steam and clouds, could be clearly seen.
At its bottom was the famed Tabacon hot springs; twelve pools and several waterfalls, supplied by millions of gallons of rushing water heated by the volcano. We joined hundreds of visitors from every country in rainforest-surrounded hot pools and waterfalls. As we soaked in the steaming waters, years of tension melted away. We left at dusk and began the scary drive up to our hotel Arenal Lodge. Just getting there was an adventure. The road was partially paved and snaked almost straight up to the top of a mountain. We were taken to a posh room straight out of an adventure movie in Africa. A manager arrived and cleared out a hummingbird. Then we leaned over our balcony and marveled at the rain forest leading up to the high volcano spewing red lava a mile or so away. We had a romantic dinner and annoyed a family of retired American dentists by telling them why we'd come to Costa Rica. But when we told them the price we were paying they were amazed. They said the same work back home in Pennsylvania, would cost $40,000.

Dr. Mario
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Next morning the volcano was completely covered by clouds. We breakfasted and watched in amazement as hotel workers placed fresh fruit on high stands for brightly colored birds. A large fur-covered raccoon-like animal came out of the jungle and begged for fruit, then ran off to hide and eat under the hotel. We walked off on a nature tour and wound our way down the mountain path which we had been warned to stay on because of poisonous snakes. We made our way to a screened building housing lush plants and hundreds of exotic butterflies. We went horseback riding in the rainforest with other guests, ducking under trees and wearing ponchos to keep dry. Too soon, our driver was there to take us on the return trip to San Jose. In his office Dr. Mario removed my temporary teeth and proudly brought in the newly prepared crowns and bridges like a doctor holding a new-born baby. He set them one at a time inside my mouth. They fit perfectly and were much brighter than my old teeth.
The big moment came when Dr. Mario presented us with the agreed-upon bill for his services. I'd had nine crowns, two root canals, one extraction, two bridges and two implants. And the total cost was less than $6,000. I'd saved $18,000. We'd had a wonderful vacation and I'd returned with a mouthful of great teeth.
The big test came when I visited my own local dentist. He told me up front that in the United States the molded teeth alone would cost more than the entire dental work done in Costa Rica. Then I opened wide and got his verdict: "This is the most magnificent dental work I have ever seen," he declared. I left smiling brightly and feeling very clever. I had to get home right away and brush my teeth. This article originally appeared in the Charlotte Observer newspaper.  Our immediate goal is to introduce you to world class dentistry at affordable prices and we will work with you personally, or your chosen travel agency, to facilitate any and every need you may have in making and fulfilling your travel itinerary. If you would like to email Dr. Mario Garita's patient coordinator about having some dental work done in Costa Rica, please contact him using the form below:
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