Cloud Dental Software Down? What to Do When You Can't Access Patient Records
Cloud dental software goes down. Internet fails. Server maintenance happens. Without offline access to patient records, your clinic stops. Here's how to prepare and what desktop software does differently.
Your internet goes out. Or the cloud dental provider has an outage. Or their server is under maintenance. Suddenly, your front desk can't check patients in. The dentist can't pull up records. Billing stops. Appointments can't be booked.
This happens more often than cloud vendors admit. In 2024, major dental cloud platforms experienced an average of 3-4 significant outages (over 1 hour) per year. Each outage during clinic hours means delayed patients, handwritten notes, and lost revenue.
What to do during an outage
Immediate steps:
- Grab paper — appointment list, patient intake forms, blank treatment notes
- Continue treating patients using paper records
- Collect payments in cash or with a non-internet card terminal
- Write down everything: treatments, payments, appointment changes
After the outage:
- Enter all paper records into the system — this takes hours
- Reconcile payments
- Verify no appointments were double-booked during the outage
- Apologize to patients who waited
The desktop software difference
Desktop dental software stores everything locally. When the internet goes down:
- Patient records are still accessible
- Appointments are still visible
- Visits can still be documented
- Billing continues
- Zero productivity lost
The downside: no remote access, no automatic cloud backup. You trade convenience for reliability. For many small practices, that trade is worth it.
Prepare for the inevitable
Whether you use cloud or desktop, have a downtime plan:
- Print tomorrow's appointment list before closing each day
- Keep paper forms accessible
- Have a non-internet payment method available
- Train staff on the downtime procedure
Cloud downtime isn't an "if" — it's a "when." Being prepared turns a crisis into an inconvenience.