Dental shortage areas in District of Columbia
HRSA designates Dental Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs) where access to dental care is constrained. These are the verified dentists practicing inside one of District of Columbia's designated zones — often the cheapest, hardest-to-find option for low-income or rural patients.
What does “dental HPSA” mean?
The Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) evaluates geographic areas, populations, and facilities and designates them as Health Professional Shortage Areas when there aren't enough dentists to meet the local population's needs.
HPSAs are scored 0–26. Higher score = greater unmet need. Federal Loan Repayment Programs prioritize HPSA-area practice, which is why many of the dentists below are early- career or mission-driven providers.
33 HPSA-area dentists in District of Columbia
Sorted by content score
- HPSA
Lawrence Edward Bowers, DDS
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Tarek Mohammad Mogharbel, DDS
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Yetunde Ibiyemi Patrick, DDS
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Fekri Mahmood Munasar, DDS
General Dentist
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Michael Mark Blicher, D.D.S.
General Dentist
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Alexandra E. S. Thomson, D.M.D
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Susan E Hodges, D.D.S.
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Samuel H Lievano, D.D.S
General Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Daniel Jeffrey Deutsch, DDS
General Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Neal M Patel, D.D.S.
General Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Anisa Omar, DDS
Orthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Thanos T Kristallis, DDS
Prosthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Mark A Tromblay, D.M.D.
General Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Faisal Mir, DDS
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Andrew Vo, D.D.S.
Endodontist
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Benjamin O Watkins III, D.D.S.
Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Madonna Zaki, D.D.S.
Dentist (Other)
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Allen Anthony Robinson, DDS
Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Raha Yousefi, DDS
Periodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Leyla Riaz Davoody, D.D.S.
Orthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Akram Hassan Shouhayib, DDS, MS
Orthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Dror Orbach, DMD
Orthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Amanda Romsa Polack, DMD, MS
Orthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Jean Li
Periodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Matthew R Kolesar
Periodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Julian Moiseiwitsch, B.D.S., PH.D.
Endodontist
WashingtonMedicareView profile - HPSA
Babak Noohi, DDS, MS
Prosthodontist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Moorean Ann Baker, DDS
Pediatric Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Siamak Sy Majidi, DDS
Pediatric Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Gia Duong, DMD
Pediatric Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Gail Cherry-Peppers, DDS, MS
Dental Public Health
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Joycie S Fernandes, B.D.S
Pediatric Dentist
WashingtonView profile - HPSA
Nafatia Noel Benson
Dental Public Health
WashingtonView profile
Dental shortage areas in District of Columbia
What does dental HPSA mean?
A Dental Health Professional Shortage Area (HPSA) is a federally-designated geographic area, population, or facility where there are not enough dentists to meet local need. HRSA evaluates and scores HPSAs from 0 to 26 — higher scores mean greater unmet need.How many HPSA-area dentists are listed in District of Columbia?
We currently list 33 verified dentists practicing inside HRSA-designated dental HPSAs in District of Columbia. The full HRSA shortage map covers many more practice sites; see the HRSA finder for the authoritative list.Why are HPSA-area dentists worth seeking out?
Dentists who choose HPSA practice are often participants in federal loan-repayment programs (NHSC, IHS, FQHC dental). Many serve a higher share of Medicaid and uninsured patients, so they tend to be the most realistic option for low-income or rural patients seeking affordable care.Can I use an HPSA score to compare providers?
No. The HPSA score reflects local need, not provider quality. A high HPSA score means the area is underserved; it does not say anything about the dentist as a clinician. Verify a license and check OIG sanctions for clinical-quality concerns.