A million more patients have lost their NHS dentist
8/7/2007 England, United Kingdom Daniel Martin www.dailymail.co.uk The number of patients denied access to an NHS dentist soared by more than 1 million after 500 abandoned the state sector last year. The Government's chief dental officer admitted yesterday that Labour's botched introduction of a contract designed to increase the number of NHS dentists had had precisely the opposite effect. Dr Barry Cockcroft revealed that 500 of the 21,500 dentists previously offering NHS treatment had refused to sign new contracts and were taking only private patients. With the average patient list of around 2,500, that would mean 1.25million had lost their NHS dentist. The Conservatives put the figure even higher, claiming that 1.4 million fewer patients are registered with an NHS dentist in England than in the year before the new contract began in April 2006. Conservative health spokesman Andrew Lansley said yesterday: "NHS dentistry has reached crisis point thanks to the Government's failure to negotiate a workable contract." A spokesman for the Citizen's Advice network said as many as two million people were going without treatment each year because they could not find a dentist taking NHS patients and could not afford to go private. Liz Phelps added: "The shocking truth is that despite all the assurances that the situation is improving, there has been no overall increase at all in the number of patients seen by NHS dentists in the first year of the reforms." The figures make a mockery of the pledge made by Tony Blair eight years [...]