FGDP(UK) to MPs: NHS dentistry is neglected, unviable and unattractive

FGDP(UK) to MPs: NHS dentistry is neglected, unviable and unattractive

The Faculty of General Dental Practice has told a committee of MPs that NHS dentistry is “highly neglected and under significant strain”, and “increasingly unviable and professionally unattractive” for dental practices and dentists. This was in evidence to the Health Select Committee’s inquiry into dentistry services.

Although this and other select committee inquiries have been stopped by the Dissolution of Parliament, it will be open to a new committee in a new Parliament to re-open the inquiry.

In its evidence the Faculty said that the NHS dental contract in England is “ill-conceived and not fit for purpose”, that its “crude and ineffective” payment system has “perverse incentives” which penalise practices which look after patients with greater need, and that many patients struggle to access NHS dental care as “the funding simply does not provide the universal offer they expect”.

In a wide-ranging response, FGDP says that as the amount of activity commissioned from each dental practice changes from year to year, practices are denied “the certainty needed to invest, recruit and train to meet future needs”. It also asserts that a combination of reduced commissioning, decreasing remuneration and the contractual restrictions on NHS work has led to many practices either closing or reducing their commitment to the NHS. The response calls for annual contractual clawback to be replaced with a multi-year cycle, and says the new NHS contract should also “include a significant element of capitation…re-introduce patient registration…and reward preventative activity, minimal-intervention dentistry and out-of-surgery visits to less mobile patients”.

The Faculty says that put together these factors have led to the number of adults in England seeing an NHS dentist every two years declining to 50%, and accuses government of peddling a “disingenuous fiction” that comprehensive NHS dental care is available to all.

The submission also calls for the NHS to “remove the outdated and unnecessary restrictions on the roles played by members of the wider dental team” and to “support the development of career pathways for general dental practice”.

Ian Mills, Dean of FGDP(UK), said: “Government has been reluctant to acknowledge that problems exist in NHS dentistry, let alone address the underlying issues. The very least we need now is an honest conversation. The Select Committee’s inquiry is an opportunity for the profession to lay bare the shortcomings of a system which is ignoring the needs of patients, driving inequality and failing members of the dental team. It is hoped that the Committee will then encourage Ministers to act swiftly to ensure that NHS dentistry has a viable future.”

The Faculty’s full submission is available to read at http://data.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/committeeevidence.svc/evidencedocument/health-and-social-care-committee/dentistry-services/written/105441.html.

Coincidental but unconnected but very similar news story in which Lord Colwyn tells peers the same thing.

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