68% believe NHS dentistry is not getting better, UK
11/2/2004 Medical News Editor Medical News Today HSA welcome the clarity from NICE (National Institute for Clinical Excellence) today about dental patient visit frequency guidelines. Yet despite the reduction in demand that this will create, with 12 months to go until the implementation of the new NHS dental contracts, the crisis in NHS dentistry is set to worsen. HSA research shows that even with Government promises to make NHS dentistry better, dentists are already leaving the NHS ahead of the new patient and practitioner contracts and state dentistry is more difficult to access than ever. HSA research released today shows: -- Despite the investment in the NHS over recent years, more than a third of UK adults think that NHS dentistry is getting worse, with only 11% believing it is improving. -- This decline is worse in rural areas, with the experience of 46% adults of NHS dentistry getting worse - reflecting the emphasis in government investment in dental access centres only in major conurbations. -- There are already 11 million adults in the UK without a dentist and there is no doubt that difficulty in accessing and affording dentistry affects the nation's oral health. -- Dentists are already reacting to the new proposed practitioner contract and are leaving NHS dentistry, believing it uneconomic for them. It is not yet known what the new patient contract will hold, even though there is less than a year before implementation. HSA believes the delay will lead to more dentists leaving NHS dentistry, [...]