BDA gives its feedback to GDC

BDA gives its feedback to GDC

The BDA has told the GDC it must focus on the fundamentals and fix Fitness to Practise, as it responded to plans set out in the regulator’s Shifting the Balance document. BDA Chair Mick Armstrong said:  “We asked dentists what they would change about dental regulation. They painted a picture of an overbearing regulator that really needs to focus.”

In a BDA survey 71% of the nearly 2,300 dentists who took part said they wanted to see making Fitness to Practise fit for purpose the GDC’s number one priority, with ideas for expansion of the regulator’s remit and activities all scoring poorly. 19% put the GDC’s signature concept of ‘upstreaming’ – focusing on reducing the likelihood of harm arising in the first place – as a top priority.

The survey also revealed the profession appears open-minded about Ministerial plans to merge health regulators. Two-thirds of respondents said they would support a dedicated dental regulator, but a similar proportion would back amalgamation if greater efficiencies could be achieved.

Despite official claims that the Dental Complaints Service (DCS) is well regarded among the profession, the survey has also pointed to significant concerns from those with direct experience of the service, and support for moving complaint handling away from the regulator - with only 13% of respondents supporting the GDC’s continuing role in this area. The BDA has now called for a formal, independent review of the DCS before any consideration is given to extending its remit.

The BDA’s response is available to download

BDA Chair Mick Armstrong said: “We asked dentists what they would change about dental regulation. They painted a picture of an overbearing regulator that really needs to focus. Dentists want a watchdog that can get the basics right, and that has to start with fitness to practise. Talk of expanded remits and ‘State of the Nation’ reports are the wrong priorities when the GDC cannot deliver on the fundamentals.

“Colleagues appear open-minded about upstreaming. There is a place for blue-sky thinking in regulation and we recognise that fixing things before they get to the regulator makes sense for patients and practitioners alike. But it is the view of this profession that the GDC’s core statutory responsibilities must come first.

“Our members would like to support a dental-only regulator, but not at any cost.  Dentists are realists when it comes to plans for merger, and clearly many doubt the GDC is capable of putting its own house in order. We will be equally pragmatic as we continue to push for a regulator capable of working with and understanding this profession.”

Headline points from BDA response

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