I live next to this dentistry and before the war, I visited this clinic out of necessity. Although the queues were huge and it was difficult to get a number, but we went here. There were a lot of good doctors, especially in the household settlement part. I had to come back here recently. My husband's seal fell out, one day off and we need to do something urgently and efficiently. I decided to go in and find out if it was possible to cure a tooth. A woman in a white coat at the reception desk looked up at me after 5 minutes, examined me from head to toe, apparently assessing my financial capabilities and in a dissatisfied tone, as if I was very disturbing her work, said that it was possible. And that's it, and silence. I had to ask leading questions. Of course, I understand that I need it, not them, but at least a little attention. With grief, it turned out that it was possible to cure, but only for a fee, because there were no more numbers, although I saw 1 person in the corridor of the polyclinic, one, and that was it! I was also satisfied with the paid option, but there was no doctor I wanted to see, and I did not want to register my husband with another unknown doctor. And the prices, of course, are astronomical for a government clinic. All good doctors either left during the war or went to work in private clinics where they pay more. In the end, we got to a doctor that day, a private one, in another clinic, and were satisfied. And they gave away an order of magnitude less money. I do not recommend it. One nurse at the reception is worth a lot. I won't say anything about doctors, I don't know.