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There will be NO NHS dentists in future if urgent action isn’t taken now, MPs warn

Published on April 03, 2025 at 11:01 PM

NHS dentistry has “no future”; unless ministers agree to pay dentists more, MPs warn.

A report by Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee said efforts to fix the ailing service have been a “complete failure”;.

J3CAFW Dentist woman examining patient
NHS dentistry could one day be rationed only to people in need (stock image)

It said the contract between the Government and dentists carrying out NHS work must be torn up and rewritten.

Clinics make so much more money from private work that thousands more will turn their back on the health service unless they get bigger subsidies.

Rescue plans introduced under the last government have done nothing to fix , the committee said.

It found that fewer than 50 dentists out of a planned 240 took up the offer of a £20,000 bonus to move to a struggling area.

Plans for mobile check-up vans were binned and the offer of extra cash for surgeries to see patients who fell flat.

If governments are not willing to invest billions in dentistry for everyone, we need a serious conversation about who should be first in line

Thea SteinThe Nuffield Trust

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown MP said: “Almost unbelievably, the Government’s initiatives appear to have actually worsened the picture.

“The time for tinkering at the edges is over and it is time for big decisions.

“ agreed that it is time to rip up the aged contract through which dentists deliver their services and start again.

“Parliament, the dental profession and patients all now need to know, as a matter of urgency, what comes next.”;

The report said: “Without a workforce sufficiently supported to deliver NHS dental care, there will be no future for NHSdentistry.”;

Figures show that just 40 per cent of adults in England have had a dentist check-up in the last two years.

Most practices have closed their lists to new NHS patients.

Last year the British Dental Association found for years – about a quarter of the population.

Public satisfaction with dental services is at an all-time low and lower than almost any other NHS service, bar A&E.

Polling by the Nuffield Trust think-tank this week revealed , and 55 per cent are not.

Thea Stein, chief of the Nuffield Trust, said: “NHS dentistry in England has fallen apart as a universal service and small tweaks cannot bring it back.

“If governments are not willing to put in the billions required to bring back dentistry for everyone, we need a serious conversation about who should be first in line.”;

A Department of Health spokesperson said: “This government inherited a broken NHS dental sector after years of neglect.

“We’re getting on with fixing it through our Plan for Change, so the NHS can be there for patients once again.”;

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