
Dr. Markus Troeltzsch (MD /DMD) completed his dental training and received his DMD in 2005 from the Dental School at the University of Erlangen in Nuremberg in Germany. In 2010, Dr. Troeltzsch completed his medical education at the Medical School at the University of Erlangen, Nuremberg, and received his MD. Dr. Troeltzsch continued his dental studies in 2008 and 2009 specializing in restorative and esthetic Dentistry (Curriculum DGÄZ). He performed his residency at the University Clinics in Bochum (Germany) and Göttingen (Germany) where he passed the board exam for maxillofacial surgery.
Dr. Troeltzsch maintains a private office for dentistry and oral and maxillofacial surgery in Ansbach, Bavaria, Germany and directs the Department for oral and maxillofacial surgery at the hospital of Ansbach, Bavaria, Germany with his father and brother. He lectures and publishes internationally and nationally on various topics, especially about up-to-date procedures of methods of augmentation of the jaws, implants, and the various aspects of medicine in dentistry. He is the main author of the augmentation guidelines paper of the Consensus conference of the German Society of Implantology (DGI) and the head editor of a comprehensive textbook “medicine for dentists,” both were published in fall 2020.
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How Greenviu started: "Over two years ago we began our journey to help medicine develop a more sustainable base. Our biggest challenge was to find scientific evidence and use that to calculate models on which to build a standard that we could develop into a comparable, fair, and transparent evaluation and certification model. Is our solution perfect? Or is it at least flawless? Sorry, it is not. It’s imperfect, contains estimations, and has faults. But it’s the best algorithm possible with the available evidence. It is designed to learn and to be improved as we gather more information.
The research that will benefit the broadest audience is published on our library page. Next, we began our search for methods and products that could make medicine more sustainable. This required that we discover which actions within the medical field pose the biggest threats to nature and if our ecological footprint can be improved without tampering with quality and hygiene management. Covid 19, for example, has made medicine’s ecological impact far worse than ever before. The abundant use of protective garments, disinfecting agents, and other measures have reached record heights. Covid 19 showed us that we can no longer wait to begin action towards making medicine green."