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University of Buffalo awardees

April 25, 2012
Two University at Buffalo innovators in dental medicine have been honored by national organizations for contributions to dental education.
BUFFALO, New York--Two University at Buffalo innovators in dental medicine have been honored by national organizations for contributions to dental education.John Eisner, DDS, PhD, associate professor emeritus, has received the Association of Canadian Faculties of Dentistry’s Distinguished Service Award.Roger Triftshauser, DDS, UB ’61, has received the American Student Dental Association’s 2012 Paragon Award.Related information, click here.Dr. Eisner is described by Bruce Graham, dean of the University of Chicago’s College of Dental Medicine, as “the only colleague who had a truly transformative impact on dental education. He has had a remarkable career filled with innovative and progressive thinking.”The impact Dr. Eisner had was on the development of information management systems that have been used in admissions and course/student evaluations in dental education.He started his career as a professor of community dentistry, but began taking on administrative roles, especially in information technology. He did this first at Dalhousie University in Canada, and then, starting in 1989, at UB.In a 2009 interview, Dr. Eisner recalled that, when he was associate dean for information resources in 1993, Louis Goldberg--the UB dental school's former dean--asked him to develop a program that would streamline the school's admissions process."I told him we could write a program just for UB and I could do it in about six months," remembered Dr. Eisner, who was also chair of an information technology advisory committee for the American Dental Education Association at the time. "But I knew that other schools were also facing the same challenge, so I asked the dean if he would mind if, instead, we wrote an industrial-strength version that we could then sell to other schools.”In 1995, the company sold three copies of AdMIT through a nonprofit organization that was run through the UB Foundation; the following year, it sold six.After that, Dr. Eisner said, "sales went through the roof."In 2009, there were “more than 200 admissions software customers, not just at dental schools but in other health professions schools,” he said.The ACFD Distinguished Service Award is not conferred annually, but only when a member has made a contribution of sweeping significance to the field of dentistry.Dr. Eisner has also been honored with the 2009 UB Faculty Entrepreneur Award and recognized in 2002 by the State University of New York as being an outstanding inventor at UB in the “entrepreneur” category.Dr. Triftshauser, an orthodontist and 1961 UB dental school alumnus, was nominated for his award by Richard F. Andolina, a UB dental student set to graduate in 2013 and current president of the ASDA.Andolina describes Dr. Triftshauser as “a life-long friend and mentor, a game changer in dentistry.”At UB’s School of Dental Medicine, Dr. Triftshauser was responsible for involving the American College of Dentists in implementing a course on ethics that is now part of the freshman introductory curriculum. On Ethics Day, as it is now known, he and his colleagues from the New York State Dental Association and the ACD take a day to interact with the freshman class and lecture on dentistry’s core ethical values.A Batavia resident, Dr. Triftshauser and his colleagues return to Buffalo to address dental school classes in an evening lecture and open forum to discuss the tripartite system of organized dentistry and the importance of membership in the American Dental Association, the American Dental Political Action Committee, and state PACs.Dr. Triftshauser’s relationship with the ASDA began when he was vice chair of the ADA’s Council on Government Affairs in the early 1990s. He later served as a member of ADPAC, which he chaired from 2009-11, and was able to interact with students on a national level.In addition to mentoring dental students and participating in dental organizations, Dr. Triftshauser has served in his community as a member of the board of education, a county legislator and an advisor to former New York State Gov. George Pataki.Dr. Triftshauser said, “It is an individual decision as to how involved anyone will be. It’s more challenging now than ever to find time and if you do not have time to be involved, stay educated on the issues and always advocate membership.”ASDA Executive Director Nancy Honeycutt says Dr. Triftshauser’s “passion for the profession is contagious and he commands respect. He continues to be a role model for all of us.”For more information, visit buffalo.edu/news.To comment on this subject, go to community.pennwelldentalgroup.com/.