Dental Services

(asked on 6th September 2023) - View Source

Question to the Department of Health and Social Care:

To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, what steps his Department are taking to improve access to NHS dental care.


Answered by
Neil O'Brien Portrait
Neil O'Brien
Shadow Minister (Policy Renewal and Development)
This question was answered on 11th September 2023

In July 2022 we announced a package of reforms to improve access to dentistry in the National Health Service. This included changes to banding and the introduction of a minimum Units of Dental Activity value.

The NHS Long Term Workforce Plan, published on 30 June 2023, sets out the steps the National Health Service and its partners need to take to deliver an NHS workforce that meets the changing needs of the population over the next 15 years. These include a 40% increase to dentistry undergraduate training places by 2031/32. To support this ambition, we will expand places by 24% by 2028/29, taking the overall number that year to 1,000 places.

There have been improvements in access to NHS dental care over the past year. Figures from the dental annual statistics, published on 24 August 2023, show that the numbers of children and adults seen by an NHS dentist have increased compared to the previous year, and the number of courses of treatment increased by 23.2% when compared to the previous year.

But we acknowledge that there are some areas where access is particularly problematic. We are working on our Dental Plan which will address how we continue to improve access, particularly for new patients; and how we make NHS work more attractive to ensure NHS dentists are incentivised to deliver more NHS care.

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