Which Specialist Should You See for Snoring?
For snoring, common specialties include: ENT (otolaryngology) to assess the nose, tonsils, and airway structure; sleep medicine clinics (pulmonology or neurology) to arrange a sleep study and diagnose OSA; and dentists trained in dental sleep medicine who make oral appliances. Many hospitals have a multidisciplinary sleep center. If the main issue is snoring with daytime fatigue, a sleep study to clarify OSA is a sensible first step — try the self-check first.
How to Reduce Snoring: From Lifestyle to Oral Appliances
Common ways to reduce snoring: weight control, side-sleeping, avoiding alcohol and sedatives before bed, and treating nasal congestion are worth trying first. For simple snoring or mild-to-moderate sleep apnea, an oral appliance (OAT) is a guideline-recognized non-invasive option that gently advances the lower jaw during sleep to keep the airway open and reduce collapse and vibration. For a comparison, see oral appliance vs CPAP vs surgery. OSAWELL is a Taiwan Class II TFDA custom medical-grade anti-snoring oral appliance (TFDA Permit No. 008771), developed with a Taipei Medical University team and made by partner dentists from your intraoral scan; suitability requires a clinician's assessment.