School officials say graduates might remain in the state and help alleviate the shortage of dentists in some areas of Maine.
BY JOSIE HUANG Staff Writer
November 16, 2007
John Ewing/Staff Photographer
University of New England dental hygiene student Caitlyn McCall, of Scarborough, works with a patient at the school’s Coleman Dental Hygiene building in Portland on Thursday afternoon. It is the only such program in Maine.
DENTIST-TO-PATIENT RATIOS 2002
NATION: One dentist for every 1,656 patients.
MAINE: One dentist for every 2,165 patients.
The University of New England said Thursday that it is exploring
the prospect of starting northern New England's first dental
school, which could help address the region's shortage of
dentists while elevating UNE's prominence in the health sciences.
Officials said the dental school would cost an estimated $17
million to build on UNE's Portland campus -- tens of millions
less than dental schools proposed in other parts of the country.
But the private university still needs investors and foundations
to be partners in the plan before it can move forward.
"I think people know that oral health is a huge health care issue
in Maine, so we're hoping we find some support for this idea,"
said UNE President Danielle Ripich.
In Maine, there was one dentist for every 2,165 patients in 2002,
compared with the national average of one dentist for every
1,656 patients.
Many patients in the state's poorer and rural communities are on
long waiting lists for dental appointments, and some travel more
than an hour to see a dentist who will accept the state Medicaid
program.
Most of Maine's dentists are either turning away Medicaid
patients or refusing to take new ones because the state
reimburses dentists for less than half of what they charge.
Ripich said UNE's dental school could turn out as many as 50
dentists a year, some of whom could work in underserved areas.
Some dentists are skeptical that graduates would venture far
from coastal and southern Maine, where most of the state's 590
dentists are now concentrated. Ripich said the plan is to expose
dental students to other parts of the state by assigning them to
clinical sites through partnerships with hospitals or dental
practices across Maine.
"As they work in more rural parts, they will hopefully stay there,"
Ripich said.
Dr. Mark Zajkowski, an oral surgeon in South Portland and
president of the Maine Dental Association, said he welcomes
UNE's interest in starting a dental school, but questions whether
there is a need.
He said there are four strong dental schools in New England --
at Harvard University, Tufts University and Boston University in
Massachusetts, and the University of Connecticut -- and a
dental program at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
Dalhousie sets aside as many as six slots for Maine students,
which Zajkowski said are not always filled.
Zajkowski said a new school may also face a challenge in finding
teachers -- pay is much higher in private practice -- and the
millions of dollars it takes to buy and operate equipment. And
he questioned whether graduates would want to practice in rural
locations if the Medicaid reimbursement rate stays the same.
"Until the state puts its money where its mouth is, you can put a
dental school in northern Maine tomorrow and you're going to
have the same problems when the students graduate," he said.
The consideration of a dental school comes at a time of rapid
expansion for UNE.
Last month it broke ground on a $6 million laboratory building
as part of its plan to become a biomedical research center. And
the first class of its pharmacy school will arrive in 2009.
The university now has Maine's only medical school and the only
programs for dental hygienists, nurse anesthetists and physician
assistants.
Ripich said UNE decided this is the time to talk about opening a
dental school because the university is enjoying record
enrollment and retention rates, and its best-ever financial
health.
"It's almost a responsibility to look at it at this point," Ripich
said.
Nationwide, applications to dental schools are up and there is
renewed interest in building facilities. A $50 million school is
planned in Arizona and an $87 million school is going up in
North Carolina.
Ripich said UNE's dental school would not cost as much to
operate because a strong science curriculum is already in place
for its other programs. The dental school would save even more
time and money by maximizing the use of technology, she said.
For example, high-tech dummies could simulate patients so
there would be no need to wait for patients to come in with
certain problems.
"Our plan is to work with simulated patients that cry and say
'ouch!' and gag and do all the same things that the normal
dental patient would do," Ripich said.
The university has studied the idea of a dental school for about
a year and a half. It recently sent letters of intent to the Maine
Department of Education and the Maine Higher Education
Council.
Ellen Beaulieu, associate provost for planning, said the university
is better positioned to build a dental school than others because
it can draw on the expertise of dentists who now teach dental
hygienists at UNE and supervise the program's clinic. "It's really
given us a link to the dental community," Beaulieu said.
It is unclear how much tuition would be, but it could be
comparable to that of medical students. Annual tuition at the
medical school is $38,930 a year.
Staff Writer Josie Huang can be contacted at 791-6364 or at:
jhuang@pressherald.com
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