logo
Delta Dental of Tennessee Honors Dr. Rhonda Switzer-Nadasdi with Smile Power Award

Delta Dental of Tennessee Honors Dr. Rhonda Switzer-Nadasdi with Smile Power Award

NASHVILLE, Tenn.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 13, 2025--
Delta Dental of Tennessee (Delta Dental) and its charitable arm, the Smile180 Foundation, recently presented Dr. Rhonda Switzer-Nadasdi, CEO of Interfaith Dental, with its Smile Power Award. The award, which celebrates an individual who has made a significant positive impact on the oral health of Tennesseans, was given to Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi in recognition of her decades-long leadership of Interfaith Dental, a volunteer-driven safety net clinic in Nashville, Tennessee, and commitment to expanding access to care for the state's most vulnerable populations.
This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250509387290/en/
Dr. Phil Wenk, CEO of the Smile180 Foundation, recently presented the Smile Power Award to Dr. Rhonda Switzer-Nadasdi, CEO of Interfaith Dental, at a conference for safety net dental clinic leaders hosted by Interfaith entitled 'River of Resilience: Leadership in Changing Currents.'
The award was presented to Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi by Dr. Phil Wenk, CEO of the Smile180 Foundation, at a conference for safety net dental clinic leaders hosted by Interfaith Dental entitled 'River of Resilience: Leadership in Changing Currents.'
'For nearly 30 years, Rhonda has never hesitated to step up and help, whether it was a patient in need of care, or a young dentist or nonprofit leader seeking advice,' said Dr. Wenk. 'Her compassion and determination have made a lasting difference in the lives of countless Tennesseans. It's an honor to recognize her with the Smile Power Award.'
Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi has spent her entire career overseeing dental programs for the underserved. After working in two international health clinics, she became the first employee and CEO of Interfaith Dental in 1995. Under her leadership, Interfaith has grown from a two-chair operation located in a church basement into a two-clinic, 26-chair facility with a staff of nearly 60 that provides over $8 million of care for 3,600 uninsured or underinsured patients each year.
'I've devoted my career to the belief that a healthy smile changes everything, and it is an honor to be recognized by partners like Delta Dental who share that commitment wholeheartedly,' said Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi. 'Increasing access to quality, affordable care is truly a team effort, and I'm fortunate to work with a terrific team at Interfaith, a wonderful and resilient group of safety net clinics leaders, and so many others who make it possible to do this type of work.'
Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi is deeply engaged in the state's nonprofit and oral health communities. She serves on the board of directors of the Tennessee Dental Association, the Center for Nonprofit Management, the Tennessee Charitable Care Network, the Safety Net Consortium of Middle Tennessee, and the Tennessee Center for Health Workforce and Development. She is the chair of the Tennessee Alliance of Oral Health Advocates and was recently inducted into the International College of Dentists, an honor reserved for 3% of dentists worldwide.
In 2021, Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi was appointed by Governor Lee to a special task force to address oral health access for all Tennesseans. The task force's resulting recommendation - a five-year, $94 million pilot program known as the Healthy Smiles Initiative - aims to increase access to oral health care for all Tennesseans by increasing the number of dentists practicing in the state. Now wrapping up its third year, the program has helped UTHSC College of Dentistry and Meharry Dental School increase their class sizes, increase access to dental care through the development of a new dental clinic in Kingsport, and create incentives for graduating dentists to practice in areas of need. In addition, under her leadership, Interfaith Dental designed and manages a statewide oral health program for low-income older adults.
Dr. Switzer-Nadasdi is just the fourth recipient of the Smile Power Award, joining a distinguished group that includes the late State Representative Charles Sargent, former Tennessee Department of Commerce and Insurance Commissioner Julie Mix McPeak, and former Tennessee Department of Health Commissioner Dr. Lisa Piercey.
Delta Dental's Smile180 Foundation has donated more than $30.7 million to Tennessee's dental colleges, children's hospitals, free and reduced-cost dental clinics, and other like-minded charities since its creation in 2015.
To learn more about Delta Dental's philanthropic work across Tennessee, visit the Smile180 Foundation website.
About the Smile180 Foundation
Smile180 reflects the transformative power of a healthy smile to turn someone's life around. The Smile180 Foundation supports Tennessee's dental colleges, children's hospitals, free and reduced-cost dental clinics, and other like-minded charities.
About Delta Dental of Tennessee
Delta Dental of Tennessee is the state's largest independent dental benefits carrier with 1.5 million lives covered. As part of the Delta Dental Plans Association, Delta Dental of Tennessee members have access to the largest dental network in the nation, with more than 206,000 providers serving more than 558,000 locations. With the simple mission of ensuring healthy smiles, Delta Dental of Tennessee works hard to help members of the communities it serves. Along with its corporate foundation, Smile180, Delta Dental of Tennessee donated more than $4.0 million in funding and in-kind services to over 100 organizations in 2024.
View source version on businesswire.com:https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250509387290/en/
Ann Waller Curtis /[email protected]
KEYWORD: UNITED STATES NORTH AMERICA TENNESSEE
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: INSURANCE DENTAL PUBLIC POLICY/GOVERNMENT HEALTHCARE REFORM PROFESSIONAL SERVICES PHILANTHROPY HEALTH FUND RAISING FOUNDATION
SOURCE: Delta Dental of Tennessee
Copyright Business Wire 2025.
PUB: 05/13/2025 10:30 AM/DISC: 05/13/2025 10:29 AM
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20250509387290/en

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Roseville-based company hosts program to guide high schoolers to high-demand trade careers
Roseville-based company hosts program to guide high schoolers to high-demand trade careers

CBS News

time26 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Roseville-based company hosts program to guide high schoolers to high-demand trade careers

ROSEVILLE – A unique summer program is giving high school students a head start on a stable, well-paying career, not in a college classroom, but on the job site. Monday marked the first day of a week-long course designed to introduce students to careers in construction. It's part of the Heavy Metal Summer Experience, a national program focused on showing students the wide range of opportunities available in the skilled trades. The goal is to expose young people to career paths that don't require a four-year degree. Instead, students can pursue training through trade schools and apprenticeship programs, often avoiding student debt altogether. The Roseville-based company Intech Mechanical is hosting the program for the second year in a row. For one week, many of the company's staff step into the role of instructors, sharing real-world knowledge and guiding hands-on training. According to Gary Myers, a partner at Intech Mechanical and director of the local program, the effort is both timely and necessary. "Our industry needed to do a better job of promoting the construction industry as a whole," Myers said. "And teaching these high school kids there's a lot of opportunities, whether that's being a sheet metal worker, plumber, pipe fitter, electrician, construction worker, laborer, whatever that is." The program comes at a critical time. The skilled trades are facing a significant shortage of workers as older generations retire, leaving tens of thousands of job openings across the country. Fields like electrical work and pipefitting are experiencing especially high demand and programs like this are helping prepare the next generation to step in.

Even Before His Return to the White House, Trump Was Becoming a Crypto Czar
Even Before His Return to the White House, Trump Was Becoming a Crypto Czar

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Even Before His Return to the White House, Trump Was Becoming a Crypto Czar

Donald J. Trump got a small taste last year of life as a cryptocurrency mogul. His stake in World Liberty Financial, the cryptocurrency firm that he unveiled during the presidential campaign, earned about $57 million, making it one of the Trump family's most lucrative investments in 2024. And a licensing deal involving a related industry, NFT collectibles, produced another $1.2 million. Mr. Trump's wife, Melania, contributed to the family income, receiving $217,000 in licensing fees related to a digital token. The results, detailed in Mr. Trump's mandatory financial disclosure report for 2024 and released on Friday, previewed the crypto riches he is now poised to reap as president. Since Mr. Trump took office a second time this year, his crypto fortunes have skyrocketed through a series of business ventures that pose unprecedented conflicts of interest. Not only is Mr. Trump a major operator in the crypto industry, he is also its top policymaker — and a symbol of its rising stature in Washington. Even as the president seeks to deregulate and promote the industry, Mr. Trump's personal net worth has soared through crypto. Though the information in the financial disclosure ends as of Dec. 31, 2024, World Liberty announced this year that it had sold more than a half-billion dollars' worth of its coin, a significant portion of which the Trump family was entitled to. Separately, Mr. Trump developed a personal cryptocurrency known as $TRUMP, a memecoin launched days before his inauguration, that on paper could be worth billions of dollars. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

With bibles, tokens and watches, Trump made millions, new disclosures show
With bibles, tokens and watches, Trump made millions, new disclosures show

CNN

time31 minutes ago

  • CNN

With bibles, tokens and watches, Trump made millions, new disclosures show

President Donald Trump has made millions from his family's cryptocurrency venture, private golf clubs and hawking everything from bibles to watches – as he's capitalized on his political prominence to expand his business empire, according to financial documents released Friday afternoon. One of the biggest sources of income Trump disclosed was a $57 million token sale through WLF Holdco LLC, which owns World Liberty Financial Inc. WLF is a Trump family crypto company and boasts that it is actively run in part by the president's sons. Meanwhile, Trump owns roughly between $1 million and $5 million worth of the cryptocurrency ethereum. He campaigned on being the most crypto-friendly president, advertising a more hands-off approach to regulating digital assets compared to prior administrations. Friday's filings, running more than 230 pages, mark the first disclosures of the billionaire's assets and liabilities since Trump returned to the White House in January. And they give the public the first snapshot of some of his recent earnings from deals inked while the Republican campaigned for office last year. Asked about the president's myriad business ventures, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Trump has been transparent. 'President Trump, Vice President Vance, and senior White House staff have completed required ethics briefings and financial reporting obligations. The Trump Administration is committed to transparency and accessibility for the American people,' she said in a statement to CNN. Federal law does not require presidents to divest their holdings, although previous officeholders have taken steps to do so or wall them off in a blind trust. Trump's assets are in a trust managed by his children, and the Trump Organization earlier this year announced that the president would not have any involvement in the day-to-day running of the company. But he still owns and benefits from his sprawling real estate and branding empire. Friday's filings show that a variety of licensing deals the president has with companies selling products using his name, image and likeness – ranging from sneakers to watches – yielded millions in royalties for Trump. That includes the more than $1.3 million Trump made from Lee Greenwood's 'God Bless the USA' Bible. On the 2024 campaign trail, Trump released a video urging supporters to purchase the Bible to 'make America pray again.' Trump also earned $2.5 million from Trump sneakers and fragrances and $2.8 million selling 'Trump Watches.' (CNN went on a hunt for the makers of the 'Swiss-made' watches in October 2024 and ended up in a small city in Wyoming.) Additionally, Trump made more than $1 million on a '45' guitar, denoting his place in the line of US presidents during his first term. The filings also reflect the large civil judgments that still loom over the president. He reported liabilities in excess of $50 million owed both to the New York attorney general and E. Jean Carroll, a former magazine columnist who alleged Trump raped her in a New York department store in the 1990s and then defamed her when he denied her claim and suggested she made up the story to boost sales of her book. On Friday, an appeals court rejected an attempt from Trump to review a $5 million judgment against him in a case brought by Carroll. The jury in that case found that Trump sexually abused Carroll, sufficient to hold him liable for battery, but did not find that Carroll proved he raped her. Trump has denied all the claims. Trump also is separately asking the appeals court to throw out an $83 million jury verdict in a second judgment Carroll won against him. The other civil judgment of more than $50 million the president disclosed stems from the $454 million that a New York judge ordered Trump to pay last year in a civil fraud case brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James. Trump has appealed that case. Trump's private clubs also generate substantial income – led by the president's flagship property, Mar-a-Lago, which brought in a little more than $50.1 million in revenue – down from about $57 million in a previous filing last year. The filings also reveal more about the speaking fees first lady Melania Trump earned during last year's campaign. She was paid $475,000 for a speaking engagement with the Log Cabin Republicans, which represents LGBTQ conservatives, in New York in July. Her paid speeches have drawn scrutiny in the past. A previous disclosure showed Melania Trump received $237,500 for an April 2024 engagement in Palm Beach, Florida. She also made nearly $217,000 related to the sale of NFTs, non-fungible tokens. Disclosures for Vice President JD Vance also were released Friday and show that the former Ohio senator and second lady Usha Vance have millions of dollars in assets, but their wealth does not come close to Trump's. Vance received between $50,001 and $100,000 in royalties for 'Hillbilly Elegy,' his 2016 memoir that catapulted him to fame and later was adapted into a movie.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store