BDA says NI dentists are at breaking point

BDA says NI dentists are at breaking point

The BDA has warned that general dental practitioners in Northern Ireland are ’at breaking point’. The comments were made as they responded to the publication of recent reports from NHS Digital. Richard Graham, chair of the BDA NI’s Dental Practice Committee, said: “Morale and earnings are at crisis point. Only meaningful investment in dental services, and the professionals who underpin these will safeguard a future for Health Service dentistry”

Commenting on the findings, Richard Graham, Chair of the BDA NI’s Dental Practice Committee, said: "This official data paints a particularly bleak picture of what GDPs in Northern Ireland have been warning about for some time. Nine years of successive government imposed pay caps, soaring expenses, increased regulation, the risk of litigation and rising indemnity fees - at the same time as direct cuts on the GDS budget - has created this downward spiral. The full financial impact, and the very real human impact is clearly evidenced by the government’s own figures.

"The situation where high street dentists have suffered a real term 38% decline in income levels over the past decade, to the point where the majority question their future in the profession, is as serious as it gets.

"Our message to the Department of Health and the Health and Social Care Board at this time, is they need to act now to ensure the future sustainability of Health Service dentistry. Morale and earnings are at crisis point. Only meaningful investment in dental services, and the professionals who underpin these will safeguard a future for Health Service dentistry".

The reports highlight a number of stark findings among Health Service practitioners:

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