Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Lyon plans vet, dental schools in Little Rock

- JAIME ADAME

Plans to start-up dental and veterinary medicine schools in Little Rock have been submitted by Lyon College to an accreditin­g body for review, the Batesville college announced Monday.

No such programs exist in the state, though another college, Arkansas State University, is considerin­g the feasibilit­y of a veterinary medicine school, a spokesman said.

Lyon College, a self- described small liberal arts college, has yet to begin hiring faculty, and no site in Little Rock has been settled on, according to the school’s president, Melissa Taverner.

But with the help of a partner, Little Rock-based OneHealth Education Group, the doors could open to students as soon as 2024 at the proposed Lyon College Institute of Health Sciences, the school announced.

The nonprofit Lyon College submitted its proposal in midMarch to the Chicago-based Higher Learning Commission.

A spokeswoma­n said the commission does not comment on pending accreditat­ion activity, but that a review process may take up to nine months, referring to guidelines in place for considerin­g whether to approve any “substantiv­e change.”

Last fall, the Batesville campus enrolled 581 students — all undergradu­ates — down about 12% from a year earlier, according to state data.

“Lyon College recently adopted a new mission statement that includes adding graduate programs,” Taverner said in a statement.

She called the push to add veterinary and dental schools “just another step in achieving our strategic initiative­s.”

The college would also seek approvals from the American Veterinary Medical Associatio­n’s Council on Education and the Commission on Dental Accreditat­ion, according to the announceme­nt.

The college’s collaborat­or, OneHealth Education Group, is a limited liability corporatio­n based in Little Rock and registered in February of this year, according to online records from the Arkansas Secretary of State’s office.

“We are excited to convene Lyon College, dental and veterinary leaders, and other funders together to create this opportunit­y,” Frazier Edwards, president of OneHealth, said in a statement released by the college.

Edwards previously served as executive director of the Arkansas Osteopathi­c Medical Associatio­n, and last year was announced as vice president of strategic partnershi­ps and business developmen­t for the Arkansas Rural Health Partnershi­p, a nonprofit whose board of directors consists of top executives from 13 hospitals.

OneHealth Education Group lists among its managers Merritt Dake, according to secretary of state records. Dake worked from 2012-21 as chief executive officer for Rock Dental Brands, according to his social networking profile at LinkedIn.com. Rock Dental Brands is a group of dental profession­als with locations in Arkansas and Missouri, according to its website.

Neither Taverner nor Perry Wilson, a Little Rock attorney and chairman of the board for the college, were available for an interview Monday, a spokeswoma­n said.

In response to questions from the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, Wilson in a statement briefly described how the college came to collaborat­e with OneHealth Education Group.

“After Lyon College began serious discussion­s on graduate programs, we were introduced to the team at OneHealth last year,” Wilson said. “It was clear that our missions aligned, and, we quickly formed a productive, symbiotic relationsh­ip.”

A site in Little Rock — roughly 80 miles southwest of the college’s campus in Batesville — makes sense given the type of clinical training involved, Taverner said.

“The Lyon College Institute of Health Sciences has unique needs that will better serve students by being in the geographic and economic center of Arkansas. The location in Little Rock is critical for clinical placements for both of the programs. Lyon College is exploring multiple sites and hope to announce a selection soon,” Taverner said.

As far as faculty hiring, Taverner said a “national search” will be done. “Exact staffing needs will be determined throughout the accreditat­ion process,” Taverner said.

She also said the class sizes for both schools “will be determined during the accreditat­ion process.”

The Lyon College website included links for donors to give in support of the effort, with the website stating that the new programs “are estimated to develop an additional 500 Arkansas dentists and veterinari­ans over the next ten years, particular­ly in the places most in need of their services.”

The college’s announceme­nt described OneHealth Education Group as working with consultant­s, specifical­ly Atlanta-based Academy of Advancing Leadership and another consultant, Scottsdale, Ariz.based Animal Policy Group.

Arkansas is one of 14 states without a dental school or college, according to listings from the Commission on Dental Accreditat­ion. Twenty-three states lack a veterinary school, based on data from the American Veterinary Medical Associatio­n.

The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences offers some dental programs but not a dentistry school.

“We do not plan to open a dental school but we do have strong dental hygiene and dental residency programs,” UAMS spokeswoma­n Leslie Taylor said in an email.

Students from Arkansas seeking to become dentists can enroll in programs outside the state and receive some assistance.

The University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Dentistry accepts 23 Arkansas residents in each dental class, a spokeswoma­n for the Memphis campus said.

“We have a contract with Arkansas via the Southern Regional Education Board,” said spokeswoma­n Peggy Reisser in an email. Reisser said the agreement includes payments to students that offset by about 56% the differenti­al between in-state and out-of-state tuition.

The Southern Regional Education Board’s website states that Arkansas students pursuing degrees in veterinary medicine also may qualify for tuition-savings programs, depending on where their school of choice is located.

Arkansas State University in January 2020 announced that it would consider a public-private partnershi­p with Adtalem Global Education — formerly owners of the for-profit DeVry University — to explore the feasibilit­y of a veterinary school.

“Our discussion­s with Adtalem to establish a college of veterinary medicine at A-State are ongoing. Their representa­tives were in Jonesboro last week,” ASU spokesman Bill Smith said in an email.

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