Healthwatch and BDA urge Chancellor to reverse a decade of NHS dentistry cuts

News

  Posted by: Dental Design      21st October 2021

In a joint message Healthwatch England and the British Dental Association have urged Rishi Sunak to use the coming Spending Review to guarantee the future of NHS dentistry.

With over 30 million appointments lost since the first lockdown, the two organisations have pressed the Chancellor to ensure resources are in place for the recovery and promised reform of the service.

The two organisations say: 

  • The crisis in the service continues to grow. Dentistry has risen to be the number one issue raised with Healthwatch over the pandemic, and the volume of feedback continues to grow.  From April to June 2021 feedback was up 55% on the previous three months, and 794% higher when compared with the same period in 2020.  Nearly 4 in 5 people (79%) of those sharing their stories said they had found it difficult to access timely care. 
  • The two bodies are pushing for the reversal of a decade of cuts With no attempt to keep pace with both inflation and population growth, the BDA have said it would take an additional £879m from the Treasury to restore resources to 2010 levels. With £0.6 billion lost in NHS patient charge revenues since lockdown – which the Government appears anxious to retrieve – both bodies have said Ministers must guarantee adequate funding to deliver NHS dentistry to all who need it and rule out both inflation-busting patient charge hikes and cuts to front line services.
  • Invest in the fundamentals. The future of national child and adult dental health surveys – vital for setting strategy – has remained in doubt owing to financial uncertainty. Without this data there is no basis to effectively plan oral health services. 

Sir Robert Francis QC, chair of Healthwatch England, said: “Lack of access to NHS dentistry has exploded as an issue for people over the last year, with both the volume of feedback and negative sentiment going through the roof. We’ve heard from patients up and down the country unable to find care, leaving them in pain and taking matters into their own hands. We’ve also heard from parents unable to register their children with an NHS dentist, as local dental practices weren’t taking on new patients, had gone private or had closed down.

“Every part of the country is facing a dental care crisis, with NHS dentistry at risk of vanishing into the void. The Government needs to use the forthcoming Spending Review to provide vital investment in services like dentistry that help keep us all healthy and ensure we build back better for current and future generations.” 

BDA Chair Eddie Crouch said: “In the last Spending Review Ministers chose to make patients pay more into NHS dentistry, so they could pay less. These charges are now a substitute for decent state investment, with no attempt to even try and keep pace with demand or inflation. Ministers have pledged reform. Simply telling dentists to do more with less will not provide the care our patients desperately need.”

A decade of cuts 

As England emerges from the pandemic NHS dental services will confront increased demand, an unprecedented backlog and widening oral health inequality.     

Yet primary care dentistry went into the pandemic receiving less direct support from the Treasury than it did in 2010, a unique status in the NHS. Following the 2015 Spending Review commitments patient charges have formed an ever-greater share of NHS budget. The net result is that in real terms government contributions fell by nearly a third between 2010 and 2019.   

Ministers have pledged wide-ranging reform to the widely discredited system NHS dentistry operates to in England. Sustained cuts will make any attempts to rebuild the service an uphill struggle, with a growing number of NHS dentists already reconsidering their future.  

The Funding Gap

Practices are set to face higher demand but remain forced to do more with less, with no attempt made to keep pace with inflation or population growth.    

  • While the population of England grew by 7.42% between 2010 and 2020, the amount of dentistry commissioned by NHS England was cut by more than 2 million units of dental activity (UDAs). UDAs commissioned per head of population fell from 1.70 to 1.56, while government contributions per head fell from £41.79 to £34.53 in the same period.
  • In 2010/11 the gross budget for high street NHS services was £2.81bn, of which £614m was drawn from patient charges, £2.2bn from direct government contributions. In 2019/20 while the gross budget reached £2.96bn, net government contributions had fallen in cash terms to £2.1bn.
  • To restore the resourcing in NHS General Dental Services to 2010 levels, simply reflecting RPI inflation would require a total budget of £3.6bn for NHS General Dental Services. In order to also reflect population growth in the intervening period would require a budget of £3.9bn.  
  • Should overall patient charge levels remain unchanged an additional allocation of £879m from government contributions, per annum, is required to restore levels of resource seen in 2010. 

The Tax on Teeth 

The 2015 Spending Review committed the Government to annual above-inflation 5% increases in dental charges, which form an ever-growing share of the NHS budget.   

The Government has operated a support scheme during the pandemic, maintaining funding for NHS practices while capacity has been reduced by the suspension of routine care and ongoing restrictions.

Consequently, patient charge revenue fell by £0.6 billion from 2019/20 to 2020/21, a gap which has been filled by the Treasury, which the Government is anxious to retrieve. 

The Government must now write off existing and any ongoing losses from patient charge revenue as a result of COVID and make no effort to reclaim them via above inflation patient charge increases or cuts to frontline services.


No Comments


No comments yet.


Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.