NHS dentistry across UK running on fumes, in face of 35 per cent collapse in real incomes

30 August 2018

The British Dental Association (BDA) has expressed concern about the long-term sustainability of the service, as new data from NHS Digital has shown that NHS dentists in England and Wales have experienced a 35 per cent pay squeeze over the last decade.

This unprecedented drop has seen real incomes for practice-owning dentists fall by as much as £47,000, and their associates by over £23,000 over the last decade. Costs facing individual practitioners for regulatory compliance and registration have gone up by 1000 per cent in the same period.

NHS dentists are expected to receive a below inflation pay uplift of less than two per cent for 2018/19.

Official data also published today shows morale and motivation among NHS dentists is now at an all-time low in all UK nations, with lower levels of morale linked to higher NHS commitments. The data shows a continued fall in the NHS workforce in England and Wales, with numbers at their lowest levels since 2010.

Research for the BBC has revealed that just 52 per cent of NHS dental practices in England are accepting new adult patients, and just 60 per cent accepting new child NHS patients. The Westminster Government’s spend per head on NHS dentistry has fallen £4.95, from £40.95 to £36, in the last five years.

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