Usually when dental students complain that they are having a hard time finding patients, it really means that they are having a hard time finding patients who need the right type of dental procedures that they need to perform in order to graduate. I use to say that all the time when I was a dental student. Even though there were plenty of patients enrolling at the dental school, I sometimes had trouble finding patients that needed periodontal surgery and hence, I would always complain that I had problems finding patients. But in actuality, there were plenty of patients...just not patients with the type of dental procedures that I needed in order to graduate. It's possible that the students at your school were not specific about why they couldn't find patients? Was it because there actually weren't any patients or was it because they had a hard time finding a particular patient with the dental procedure that they needed to graduate?
Anyhow you might still be right in your assumption. Only time will tell. Patients don't show up at dental schools until they are in pain. Dental problems haven't had time to fester and get worse and the majority of uneployed people have only recently loss their jobs. Give it some time...when caries eventually result in a root canal and they cannot afford to pay a private practice dentist for it after trying thier hardest to find the money, it's probably then that they will go looking for a dental school. My suggestion that patient enrollment at dental schools will increase is only my prediction...but it's a prediction based on my past experience. Every single one of my patients in dental school became patients at UCLA simply because they could not afford to pay for the dental services by a private practice dentist. I'm sure that every one of them would have preferred a private practitioner but their finances left them little choice but to have it done at a dental school. I'm sure that theme is true of every dental school in the country. And even if they don't know the quality that they are getting with student dental work, what choice do they really have? Many areas are just not blessed with free dental clinics. In those areas, the dental schools and the hospital GPR programs are the next best thing.
I also noticed that you attend Stony Brook's dental school. New York City and Long Island may be the one exception to my prediction. Never have I seen a region that is more saturated with dental schools and hospital GPR programs than the New York City and Long Island areas. The area that you attend dental school is unique because unemployed patients have several alternatives to cheap dental care. That may also be the reason why the students at Stony Brook have not been getting the types of patients they need. The several GPR programs in your area may be consuming larger pieces of the patient pie...leaving Stony Brook with the few patients remaining. Anyhow, it's just my prediction.