A multi-provider practice is not a DSO with multiple locations, but it is also not a simple single-chair office. Henry Schein’s June 30, 2026 deadline hits that middle category with more workstations, more data, and more scheduling complexity than a solo practice faces.
Ekim IT Solutions scopes Dentrix Windows 11 upgrades differently for multi-provider practices because the size of the project changes substantially once more than one provider is working out of the same location. Here is what that means in practice.
A solo dental practice might have three or four Dentrix workstations to check and upgrade. A multi-provider practice with six or eight chairs, a dedicated imaging room, and several administrative stations can easily have fifteen or more machines tied to a single Windows 10 deadline.
More providers means more patient volume, more data passing through Dentrix daily, and more regulatory exposure if even a few of those machines are missed during the upgrade. A missed workstation in a fifteen-machine practice is just as much of a compliance gap as if the entire practice had never started the upgrade.
Typical scope for a 2 to 3 chair single-provider office
Typical scope for a 6 to 8 chair multi-provider office
Upgrades must be staggered around provider schedules, not completed all at once
With multiple providers seeing patients simultaneously, taking workstations offline for upgrades needs to be staggered carefully. No provider can lose access to Dentrix during active patient hours. This turns a single-day project into a multi-week rollout.
More operatories means more imaging bridge compatibility checks running in parallel
Multi-provider practices run more imaging hardware across more operatories, meaning more imaging bridge compatibility checks need to happen alongside the OS upgrade. A bridge that worked on Windows 10 may require driver updates for Windows 11, and each operatory’s setup may be slightly different.
More simultaneous Dentrix users may require a server upgrade alongside workstation upgrades
More simultaneous Dentrix users places higher demand on the server itself. If the server hardware is also aging, a multi-provider practice may need a server upgrade alongside the workstation upgrades, not just a workstation-only project. That adds significant scope and requires planned downtime.
Ekim IT Solutions recommends multi-provider practices sequence the upgrade by provider schedule rather than by location in the office. Identify which providers have lighter patient schedules on which days, and upgrade those providers’ workstations first. This spreads the upgrade work across several weeks rather than attempting it during a single closure, which most multi-provider practices cannot afford given their patient volume. Each provider’s workstation gets upgraded during a window when that provider has no patients scheduled, keeps every other provider operational, and gives time to confirm Dentrix and imaging are running correctly before the next workstation goes offline.
A HIPAA Security Risk Assessment or OCR audit at a multi-provider practice involves checking a larger number of workstations against the same Henry Schein deadline.
More machines means more opportunities for one or two to be missed during an upgrade rollout, and a missed workstation is just as much of a documented compliance gap as if the entire practice had never started the upgrade. The SRA workstation inventory at a multi-provider practice must account for every machine, with completion dates documented for each one, not just a general statement that the practice is upgrading.
Select your practice profile to see a typical workstation count and upgrade timeline for your size of practice.
Dentrix machines
imaging verifications
phased rollout
Ekim IT Solutions works exclusively with dental practices. We serve New England and New York with on-site support and dental practices nationwide with remote support. We scope Dentrix Windows 11 upgrades to match the real size of a multi-provider practice, more workstations, more data, and more scheduling complexity than a solo office, before June 30, 2026 arrives.