DentalNPI
Top 6 · AR

Top Dental Public Healths in Arkansas

Community dental health and policy practitioners. Curated top-6 from the dental sub-specialty taxonomy and CMS quality signals — Medicare enrollment, MIPS score, and HPSA service all weighed in.

In top list
6
Medicare-enrolled
0
HPSA shortage
1

Indexed density: 0.19 per 100K residents (population 3.09M ).

Verified · NPPES (CMS)refreshed May 7, 2026
  1. Mark E. Pickett, DDS

    Dental Public Health

    Camden, AR
    View profile
  2. Samuel Todd Swann, D.D.S

    Dental Public Health

    Greenbrier, AR
    View profile
  3. Mark A, Davis, DDS

    Dental Public Health

    HPSA
    Shirley, AR
    View profile
  4. Andrea M. Smith, D.M.D.

    Dental Public Health

    Forrest City, AR
    View profile
  5. John William Antonetz, DDS

    Dental Public Health

    North Little Rock, AR
    View profile
  6. Dillon C Howell

    Dental Public Health

    Jonesboro, AR
    View profile

Other dental specialties in Arkansas

All Arkansas dentists →
Frequently asked

Dental Public Healths in Arkansas: questions

  • How are these dental public healths in Arkansas ranked?
    The ranking weights NPPES record completeness, CMS Medicare enrollment, MIPS quality scores when available, and HRSA HPSA service. Of the 6 listed, 0 are Medicare-enrolled and 1 practices in a dental shortage area. We do not accept payment for placement.
  • Do dental public healths in Arkansas accept Medicaid?
    Arkansas's Medicaid program is Arkansas Medicaid. Specialist participation varies. We surface Medicare enrollment as a public-program proxy on each profile, but the only authoritative answer comes from the office and the Arkansas Medicaid provider directory (https://humanservices.arkansas.gov/about-dhs/dms/).
  • How do I check a dental public health's license in Arkansas?
    Use the Arkansas State Board of Dental Examiners license-lookup at https://asbde.arkansas.gov/. Confirm the license is active and check for any disciplinary actions.
  • When should I see a dental public health instead of a general dentist?
    You generally don't — this is a non-clinical specialty; County health departments employ public health dentists for policy and program work; FQHCs (Federally Qualified Health Centers) sometimes employ them as dental directors.