BDA tells ministers: don’t cut bursaries for dental students

BDA tells ministers: don?t cut bursaries for dental students

The BDA has warned the government that it risks shutting students from poorer backgrounds out of the profession, following media coverage suggesting that the Government plans to cut bursaries for student doctors and dentists. Paul Blaylock, Chair of the British Dental Association's Students' Committee said: “If the funding is cut for student dentists, the government will shut talented young people out of the dental profession.”

Nurses have already been in the firing line, with funding for students scrapped in the November budget. The BDA has argued that the next generation of healthcare professionals will now be saddled with unacceptable levels of debt, with dental graduates already facing an average estimated debt of £60,000 come graduation day.  1,231 dental students received support with their studies in the 2014/15 academic year, with £5,682,231 spent covering the cost of bursaries and tuition fees.

Paul Blaylock went on to say, "These bursaries represent a lifeline for some students, and are not going to magically plug the black hole in the public finances.  Already a typical dental graduate could expect to be saddled with over £60,000 debt come graduation day. These new loans will only serve to discourage students from poorer backgrounds. Nurses, doctors and dentists are at one on this. Government shouldn't be looking to balance the books off the back of the next generation of healthcare professionals.”

Dental Bursaries and debt, the facts:

0
0
0
s2sdefault

You need to be logged in to leave comments.