University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine

Coordinates: 40°26′33″N 79°57′46″W / 40.442601°N 79.962684°W / 40.442601; -79.962684

University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine
Type Public
Established 1896
Dean Thomas W. Braun
Academic staff
178[1]
Students 439 (77 undergraduate, 322 first professional, and 40 specialty residents)[2]
Location Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Campus Oakland (Main)

The University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine is the dental school of the University of Pittsburgh (Pitt). It is located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. It is one of Pitt’s six schools of the health sciences and one of several dental schools in Pennsylvania. It is closely affiliated with the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center. The School of Dental Medicine accepted 3.6% of applicants for the class of 2016, a record low for the school's entire history.

Located in Salk Hall on Pitt’s campus, the School of Dental Medicine is widely recognized for excellence in education, service, and research. Each year, between 70 and 80 students graduate from Pitt’s D.M.D. program.

Admission into the School of Dental Medicine is highly competitive. Eighty incoming students were accepted out of 2,200 applications submitted. Total mean college GPA of incoming students in 2010 was 3.61 (science 3.56); academic average DAT score was 20.32 (science 20.09).

Dr. Thomas W. Braun is the School of Dental Medicine’s current dean, a post that he has held since 2000.

History

Originally founded as the Pittsburgh Dental College, the school was organized and chartered simultaneously with its establishment as a department of dentistry at the Western University of Pennsylvania, the former name of the University of Pittsburgh.[3] The School of Dental Medicine welcomed its first class of 119 freshmen that September. The school grew quickly and moved into increasingly larger facilities.[4] Under the leadership of Dean H. Edmund Friesell,[5] the Dental College was renamed the School of Dentistry when it became an integral part of the university when the university assumed charge of the Dental Department and property following the implementation of an agreement on October 5, 1905.[6] By the 1920s, the dental school was reported to be, for at least a time, the largest in the world.[7]

The School of Dental Medicine has occupied its current space in Salk Hall, which was converted from a former municipal hospital facility to house Pitt’s dental and pharmacy schools, since 1967.

Noteworthy events in School of Dental Medicine history:

Education

The University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine offers the following educational programs:

First Professional DMD

Residency Training Programs in:

Dental Hygiene

International/Advanced Standing Program Interschool Collaborative Programs

Dental Informatics Postgraduate Program

The School of Dental Medicine also offers a variety of continuing education courses, which are held both on-campus locations and at 13 off-site locations.

Research

The School of Dental Medicine is committed to conducting groundbreaking research that advances scientific knowledge and leads to novel approaches to dental care. For fiscal year 2008, the school was ranked 13th in research funding by the National Institute for Dental and Craniofacial Research, one of the National Institutes of Health.

School of Dental Medicine faculty members are involved in the following research centers:

Additional research is ongoing in the following departments:

The school offers numerous opportunities for students interested in pursuing scientific research as well. The Dean’s Summer Research Scholarship supports a three-month summer research experience to three incoming first professional dental students each year. Also, the school’s annual research symposium showcases student work in scientific investigation.

School Facilities

Educational

The School of Dental Medicine facility occupies Salk Hall and the adjoining Salk Hall Dental Annex and is located on the University’s upper campus near UPMC hospitals and the School of Medicine.

Clinical

The School of Dental Medicine treats many patients in its clinical facilities, offering the full range of dental services. Treatment is provided by dental hygiene students, third- and fourth-year dental students or by specialty residents and is supervised by faculty members.[8] Patients who prefer treatment by faculty members rather than students may choose University Dental Health Services, the School of Dental Medicine’s faculty practice. UDHS dentists also offer comprehensive services, ranging from routine dental care to various specialty areas.

A number of the School of Dental Medicine’s clinical offerings are specialized for certain groups of patients.

Other

The School of Dental Medicine’s Dental Museum features a host of dental artifacts used by early 20th century practitioners. It also includes works of fine art by alumnus Dr. Frederick Franck (DDS ’42) and Mr. Virgil Cantini. The Dental Museum is open to the public from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday–Friday.

Publications

The School of Dental Medicine publishes Pitt Dental Magazine biannually to inform the school’s alumni and friends about its activities and initiatives. It also distributes an electronic alumni newsletter a number of times throughout the year and a monthly e-newsletter to faculty, staff, and students at the school.

The school also publishes a Facts and Figures brochure, which is updated annually.

References

  1. "University of Pittsburgh Fact Book 2009" (PDF). University of Pittsburgh. 2009: 43. Retrieved 2009-05-22
  2. "University of Pittsburgh Fact Book 2009" (PDF). University of Pittsburgh. 2009: 27. Retrieved 2009-05-22
  3. Starrett, Agnes Lynch (1937). "School of Dentistry". Through One Hundred and Fifty Years: The University of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 385. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  4. "Dental College Will Change Its Location". The Pittsburg Press. 1902-02-19. p. 7. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  5. "Local Dentists At Centenary Banquet Held In Pittsburgh". The Daily Times. Beaver and Rochester, PA. 1940-03-15. p. 6. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  6. Starrett, Agnes Lynch (1937). "School of Dentistry". Through One Hundred and Fifty Years: The University of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 389. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  7. "Pitt Dental School Is Largest in the World". The Daily Times. Beaver, PA. 1923-11-10. p. 4. Retrieved 2010-10-11.
  8. Schneider, Mike (1987-03-31). "At Pitt, realism is drilled into dental students". The Pittsburgh Press. pp. B6–B7. Retrieved 2010-10-11.

Further reading

Sissman, Isaac (1971). 75 Years of Dentistry, University of Pittsburgh: A History of the School of Dental Medicine. Pittsburgh, PA: School of Dental Medicine. 

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