Dentistry heading for 'name only' NHS service

A rise in dentistry fees, beginning on 1 April, mean that NHS patients in England will pay £1.10 extra for a routine check-up.

The new charges will also see the cost of a set of dentures rise by £12.80 to nearly £270 as dentistry leaders claim that charges are increasingly being relied on and in the future dentistry could end up as an NHS service 'in name only'.

Hoping to keep services sustainable by boosting the fees, the new charges are: £22.70 for Band 1 treatment (examination, X-rays and scale and polish; £62.10 for Band 2 treatment (fillings and root canal work); and £269.30 for Band 3 treatment (crowns, dentures and bridges).

The British Dental Association says that patient charges are increasingly being used to fund the service, accounting for nearly 30 per cent of the budget (up from just over 20 per cent in 2010).

The government currently invests £2bn a year in the service - an estimated drop of £500 million in real terms since 2010 meaning the service is lagging behind the rest of the UK when it comes to public funding.

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This story was first published in digitalhealth.net

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