Schools
Dental School to Open in the Hudson Valley
It's the first dental school to open in New York in 50 years.

New York State’s first new dental school in nearly 50 years is set to open this fall.
Touro College and University System received final state approval and will establish the Touro College of Dental Medicine at its New York Medical College campus in Valhalla.
Touro College of Dental Medicine at New York Medical College will join the Touro School of Health Sciences, Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine (with campuses in Harlem and Middletown), Touro College of Pharmacy and New York Medical College in New York State. These institutions collectively graduate more than 2,000 health care professionals every year, officials said.
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“As New York State’s first new dental school in nearly half a century and the only dental school in the Hudson Valley, the Touro College of Dental Medicine at NYMC will fill a void in dental education and improve access to oral health care, particularly in under-served rural and urban communities throughout the region,” said Alan Kadish, M.D., president of Touro College and University System, in a prepared statement.
With the goal of bolstering dental education and improving access to oral health care throughout New York’s Hudson Valley region and beyond, the Touro College of Dental Medicine at NYMC will include a four-year pre-doctoral program for students, a continuing education program for practicing dentists and a 132-chair community dental clinic focused on providing patients in under-served communities in the Hudson Valley and the Bronx with affordable and quality treatment, officials said.
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The school is scheduled to open in the fall of 2016, with an anticipated enrollment of 110 students. When at full capacity, the school will include approximately 440 students.
and offer basic science coursework taught by the medical school faculty as well as state-of- the-art digital dental clinical capabilities.
“The dental school’s location within the NYMC campus gives the school and its students a competitive edge,” said Edward C. Halperin,M.D., M.A., NYMC chancellor and CEO and Touro College and University System provost for biomedical affairs. “Students of the Touro College of Dental Medicine at NYMC will reap both the benefits of a new school, including state-of-the-art facilities and leading educational innovations and those of an established institution, including NYMC’s expert faculty, long-standing and celebrated research program and strong network of affiliated hospitals.”
Touro has appointed Jay P. Goldsmith, D.M.D. as the founding dean of the dental school. Dr. Goldsmith was formerly a professor, program director and deputy chief in NYMC’s Department of Dental Medicine.
“Students of the Touro College of Dental Medicine at NYMC will enjoy the advantages of this extensive medical education network and enhanced inter-professional connections as they benefit from world-class faculty and facilities, as well as being part of an historic initiative in dental education,” said Goldsmith.
Edward F. Farkas, D.D.S. has been named senior associate dean for clinical affairs and chairman of dentistry. Dr. Farkas, a 1985 graduate of New York University, has been practicing general dentistry in New York City for more than 30 years, and has been involved with the founding of the dental school from the outset.
The mission of the TCDM at NYMC is to graduate outstanding dental professionals who will utilize a complex knowledge base and sophisticated perceptual skills and deliver excellent health care service to their diverse communities with integrity, compassion, and empathy. The school is dedicated to conducting important educational and clinical research, while providing excellent dental health services to the public,” said Farkas.
Ronnie Myers, D.D.S. has been named senior associate dean for academic and administrative affairs. Previously, he served as vice-dean for administration at Columbia University College of Dental Medicine. Salomon Amar, D.D.S., PhD, has been named provost for biomedical research at TCUS, professor of molecular biology at NYMC and professor of dentistry at TCDM.
“As one who has been involved in dental education for 34 years, I was moved by Touro’s charge to merge education with a compassionate approach to patient care and to view health care delivery as a responsibility. I envision the development of an educational program that will arm our diverse student body with the tools necessary to provide primary care to those most at risk. To that end,developing a program from the ground up is an opportunity of a life time,” said Myers.
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