Dentist earns national award

WINSTED — For many health-care professionals, developing and maintaining a successful private practice in their chosen field is enough for them to be satisfied.

But not for local dentist Dr. N. Gary Jamieson.

The Winsted native — who has practiced dentistry in town for more than 40 years — recently received the prestigious Mastership honor from the Academy of General Dentistry.

The award, which is only earned by a handful of dentists throughout the country each year, is a significant professional achievement by any standard.

To be considered for the honor, the individual must first be named a fellow of the academy. This alone requires 500 hours of continuing education in the field of dentistry.

A Mastership hopeful must then complete 1,100 additional hours of AGD-approved continuing education classes — this includes at least 400 hours of hands-on course work — before he or she can apply for the award.

Jamieson, 70, said the extensive course work and examination that fulfill the Mastership requirements not only serve him well as a dentist, but also are an ongoing advantage for his patients.

“I think it enables me to keep up to date in the treatment I give to the people who come here,� he said of his Park Place office and home.

After graduating from Tufts University’s School of Dental Medicine in Boston in 1964, Jamieson returned to Winsted with his wife and their four (at the time) small children to open a new dental practice in his hometown.

“All of the dentists who were already in town were very supportive,� he said. “They were very interested in bringing people back who had grown up here. And we thought Winsted was a great town to raise children.�

And it didn’t take the graduate of Gilbert School long to find a suitable location for his office: the Park Place home where he was raised.

“My mother and grandmother owned it at the time and I bought it from them,� he said.

Since then, the house — which was built sometime in the 1870s according to town documents — has not only served as the location of his dental practice, but also as his own family’s home.

“It’s been advantageous,� he said of living and working in the same building. “I walk to work every morning.�

Jamieson said he had decided at a relatively young age to be a dentist.

“When I was a kid, I used to love to work with my hands,� Jamieson said. “And dentistry has a lot of hands-on work with it.�

Over the years, although most of the basics that form the foundation of the field have remained the same, much of the technology used in a daily practice has changed quite a bit, Jamieson said.

“The impression and composite materials we use have changed and everything is computerized,� he said.

But one thing that has remained the same is Jamieson’s passion for dentistry and helping others.

“I still find dentistry very interesting,â€� he said. “I still practice dentistry every day  and I will work as long as I have my health.â€�

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