Threads / Dentistry in England / NHS funded dental care is in crisis in some parts of the co…
Committee Material Published 8 Feb 2023 ↗ View on Parliament

NHS funded dental care is in crisis in some parts of the country, and NHS England’s failure to ensure people can access routine dental care is leading to more acute dental health problems. NHS England, rather than ICSs, remains responsible for most NHS dentistry but in some parts of the country it is impossible to find a dentist offering NHS treatment. At our evidence session in November NHS England could not tell us how much longer it expected these gaps in the provision of an essential serv...

NHS funded dental care is in crisis in some parts of the country, and NHS England’s failure to ensure people can access routine dental care is leading to more acute dental health problems. NHS England, rather than ICSs, remains responsible for most NHS dentistry but in some parts of the country it is impossible to find a dentist offering NHS treatment. At our evidence session in November NHS England could not tell us how much longer it expected these gaps in the provision of an essential service to remain. It told us about several changes it has recently made, including increasing payments for complex work, allowing dental health technicians Type: conclusion | Number: 6 | Response status: accepted Government response: The government agrees with the committee’s recommendation 6.2. Securing recovery of dental access is a key NHS priority. The pandemic had a significant impact on the delivery of dental services and NHS England is taking steps to recover dental activity and improve acces