At Falmouth Dental Arts, trust isn’t something we talk about often — it’s something we build quietly, visit by visit, year after year. For more than 40 years, FDA has had the privilege of caring for multiple generations of families. Parents bring their children, those children grow up and bring their own kids, and somewhere along the way, our team becomes a familiar part of their lives.
That kind of continuity doesn’t happen by accident. It’s the result of long-term relationships, consistent care, and a genuine commitment to knowing our patients as people, not just charts.
What makes those long relationships possible is the way our team shows up, year after year. Many of our patients have spent decades with the same dentist and hygienist, and that familiarity creates a sense of ease you can’t replicate overnight. Appointments feel less like checklists and more like conversations.
We notice the small changes and remember past concerns. We can have honest, straightforward conversations because there’s already a foundation of trust in place. That relationship allows us to focus on long-term oral health, not just what needs attention that day.
At FDA, we take pride in being approachable and down-to-earth. We want patients to feel comfortable asking questions, sharing concerns, or even just chatting about what is going on in their lives for a moment before their appointment begins. To create that personal experience, Dr. Brunacini and Dr. Karagiorgos have intentionally built an office culture that allows our team to care for our patients the way we believe is best — thoughtfully, consistently, and without rushing. It gives us the freedom to focus on relationships, not volume. To us, dentistry isn’t transactional. It’s personal.
At the heart of Falmouth Dental Arts is a simple goal: to care for our community with honesty, familiarity, and respect. Whether you’ve been coming here for decades or are new to the practice, we’re grateful for the trust you place in us. One smile at a time, we’ll keep doing what we’ve always done — showing up, listening, and caring for our patients like neighbors.
