
Manima
Manima
The U.S. National Academy of Medicine (NAM) defined Patient-Centered Care (PCC) as a core health system standard for the 21st century: “Providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values, and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions.”
Manima addresses a structural and under-solved problem in dentistry:
clinical outcomes, patient trust, compliance, and revenue are heavily determined by communication quality, yet communication is treated as intuition rather than a system.
Dentistry combines high emotional load (fear, pain, cost, loss of control) with asymmetric knowledge. Even technically excellent dentists routinely face:
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patient resistance to treatment plans
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price objections disconnected from real financial constraints
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emotional escalation, mistrust, and second opinions
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burnout caused by constant interpersonal friction
Manima introduces a behavioral intelligence layer into dental practice.
It analyzes patient and dentist personality structures, predicts interaction risks, and provides real-time, practical communication guidance tailored to the specific doctor–patient pair.
The core insight:The same clinical explanation, said by the same dentist, produces radically different outcomes depending on the patient’s psychological structure.
Manima turns this from an art into an operational system.