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Almost a third of people in England use private dentists amid NHS dental crisis

1 day ago
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Almost a third of people in England now use private dentistry, with a sharp rise in the number of poorer households forced to pay for fillings and extractions.The scarcity of NHS care means the proportion of people turning to private dental services jumped from 22% in 2023 to 32% late last year, the health service’s patient watchdog found.The reliance on paid-for treatment is so significant that dental care is becoming a costly “one tier” – private-only – service for more and more people, Healthwatch England is warning.It is concerned that the percentage of people who describe themselves as struggling financially that have used private dentistry has almost doubled in recent years from 14% to 27%.Those who do are hit with a “double penalty”, the watchdog added.

That is because dentists charge much more for private than NHS work, for example £64 for a check-up that costs only £27.40 on the NHS.And they may also lose out because many low-income patients, as well as all pregnant women and new mothers, miss out on free NHS dental care to which they are entitled because they cannot find a dentist to treat them as health service patients.“Our findings are a warning that for some people there’s only one-tier dental care – private,” said Rebecca Curtayne, Healthwatch England’s acting head of policy, public affairs and research.“It’s the most vulnerable people in our society who bear the brunt of the ongoing shortage of NHS dental appointments.

“Too many people on low income are being forced into private care they struggle to afford, or are going without treatment altogether,The system is failing those who need it most,”Healthwatch’s findings are based on a representative survey of 2,593 adults it undertook last October and November to inform its annual report about patients’ experience of healthcare, which it is publishing later this week,Ministers should tackle the access crisis by giving everyone the right to see an NHS dentist in the same way they are entitled to be on a GP surgery list, according to Curtayne,Healthwatch, the statutory NHS patient champion, is being abolished as part of Wes Streeting’s controversial reorganisation of the NHS in England.

The big shift to private dental care showed NHS dentistry “exists in name only for many people”, the Patients Association said,“This report is yet further damning evidence on the state of NHS dentistry and this double penalty for people on low incomes demonstrates a systemic failure with real human consequences,” said Rachel Power, the association’s chief executive,“This isn’t just about the cost of dentistry,The lack of affordable dental care harms physical health, leaves people in ongoing, sometimes agonising, pain, and can take a heavy toll on mental and emotional wellbeing,”Power added: “Healthwatch’s warning that we are sleepwalking towards a one-tier, costly system is one we should all take seriously.

Where getting dental care simply means paying for it privately, the NHS dental service exists in name only for many people.”The Competition and Markets Authority last week launched an inquiry into the UK’s £8.4bn private dental market “to make sure it is working well for UK consumers”.Explaining its decision, the competition watchdog’s chief executive, Sarah Cardell, said: “Going to the dentist is an important part of health and wellbeing.Yet we’re concerned many may be uncertain about costs, availability, treatment options and what they’re entitled to.

For some, turning to private dentistry is a choice – but for many a necessity,”The CMA’s estimate of the number of people using private dental care in the UK – one in five – is substantially lower than Healthwatch’s 32% in England,Its review will look at access to private dentistry, competition within the sector and the “significant” price rises surgeries have imposed in recent years,For example, the cost of an initial consultation jumped by 23% to £80 and a check-up by 14% to £55 between 2022 and 2024,Dentists blame ministers for the inaccessibility of NHS dental care.

They say that the NHS pays them so little to carry out certain types of work that they provide them at a loss and have to cross-subsidise that to the tune of £400m a year just to break even on those treatments.The British Dental Association (BDA), which represents dentists, claims that this “funding gap … is inevitably putting some pressure on private pricing.Government has a responsibility to properly fund NHS care to prevent people being forced into private treatment.”Responding to last week’s announcement of the CMA inquiry, Eddie Crouch, the BDA’s chair, said: “Those left without options, who have felt forced to go private, are there entirely because of choices made by the Treasury.”The BBC disclosed last week that dentists in England were doing so little NHS work that they had handed back £936m over the last two years of the money that had been allocated to pay them for performing procedures.

A Department of Health and Social CCare spokesperson said: “As this report shows, this government inherited an NHS dentistry service that had been left to rot for more than a decade.We believe strongly that everyone should be able to get dental care, not just those who can afford it.“We have taken immediate action to fix this, delivering 1.8m more treatments in the first seven months of this year, with more children and the most deprived benefitting most.We are also reforming the dental contract, to treat more patients and put a greater focus on prevention.

We’re determined to end the two-tier service and put dental care within everyone’s reach.”
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Dominant Lossiemouth a winner as Cheltenham puts civil war on hold

No sooner had Lossiemouth lifted the roof off Cheltenham with a staggeringly dominant Champion Hurdle victory than the skies around Prestbury Park also began to brighten too. The buildup to the festival had been dominated by talk of civil war, of feuding and internecine conflict. But this was a reminder of the sport’s simple pleasures. Horse and jockey. Fence and turf

about 8 hours ago
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Holding out for a Hero? How cricket’s Hundred auction works and who is available

A rather drab event space hidden away next to Boots near Piccadilly Circus feels a long way from the 18,000-capacity Etihad Arena in Abu Dhabi, where the Indian Premier League auction was held in December, but the Hundred will take a significant step in the direction of its new big brother when the first major player auction in English sport takes place on Wednesday and Thursday.As is likely to be the case for all aspects of the competition moving forward the impetus for switching from a player draft to an auction has come from the new overseas investors, four of whom also own IPL teams, who having committed £975m to buying stakes of between 49% and 100% in the eight Hundred franchises, understandably want to control its future.For the first five editions of the Hundred recruitment operated via a draft system, with players registering themselves at one of five fixed salary bands, and the franchises taking it in turns to select five players from each to complete a squad.In the new auction all players will be bought via competitive bids, although they have all been assigned a category – Hero, Ranked and Nominated – based on the interest they attracted when franchises submitted initial shortlists.The women’s auction takes place on the opening day, followed by the men’s teams 24 hours later, with a day of bidding thanks to a total of 425 names in the hat

about 8 hours ago
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Neil Simpson wins first Great Britain medal at Winter Paralympics with skiing silver

Great Britain won their first medal of the Winter Paralympics on Tuesday as Neil Simpson imposed himself on a stacked field to claim silver in the men’s visually impaired alpine combined.Finishing second behind the home favourite Giacomo Bertagnolli, but ahead of Austria’s Johannes Aigner, who has won two gold medals at these Games, Simpson found the form the British team had been hoping for as he recorded a leading time in the final slalom race to pull himself up from fourth place in the standings.Tension had been rising inside ParalympicsGB after the first three days of competition saw British athletes repeatedly fall short, including Simpson who came fourth in the downhill on Monday after winning gold in Beijing four years ago. Earlier on Tuesday there had been further disappointment when Menna Fitzpatrick came last in the women’s VI combined. But with Britain now on the board thanks to the 23-year-old Simpson, there will be renewed confidence going into the remainder of the week

about 9 hours ago
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Cheltenham festival day two: L’Eau Du Sud can edge Majborough in Champion Chase

The key question before the Queen Mother Champion Chase at Cheltenham on Wednesday is which version of Majborough will turn up.If it is the Majborough that powered 19 lengths clear of Marine Nationale, the Champion Chase winner last year but sadly absent this time, at Leopardstown in February, his likely price of around 5-6 will look like one of the bets of the meeting.Majborough’s failure to justify short odds in the Arkle here 12 months ago is still painfully raw for his backers, however, and Willie Mullins’s chaser could be a favourite to take on, given the unforgiving nature of a race in which a single mistake can end a runner’s chance.Il Etait Temps, a stable companion of the market leader, was the favourite for the race on Wednesday before his run in the Clarence House Chase at Ascot, but he was already soundly beaten before taking a crashing fall two out and it remains to be seen if that has left a mark.The novice Irish Panther is an interesting contender for a race which is wide open if the favourite disappoints, but the proven course form of L’Eau Du Sud (4

about 10 hours ago
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Ladies Day returns to Cheltenham festival promising ‘glamour and glory’

First and foremost, it is a huge sporting event, billed by its fans as the Olympics of jump racing – but it can also act as a social barometer, giving clues as to the state and mood of the nation.This year’s Cheltenham festival, which began on Tuesday, feels a little like a step back in time with the return of “Ladies Day” after a five-year hiatus and a reduction in the price of a pint.In 2024, a decision by the Jockey Club, which owns the racecourse, to launch a unisex “Style Wednesday” on what used to be Ladies Day was labelled “woke” by some rightwing commentators.The Jockey Club persisted with the free-for-all last year but this time Ladies Day is back and billed as a celebration of “glamour and glory”.There will be prizes for the best-dressed individual, duo and group, and the former jump jockey champion Rachael Blackmore has been appointed “head of Ladies Day”

about 11 hours ago
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England recall Ollie Chessum for France game as Borthwick fights for his future

Steve Borthwick has insisted the Rugby Football Union’s vote of confidence has not put him on notice and that he is ready to fight for his future when he reviews England’s Six Nations campaign with the chief executive, Bill Sweeney.Borthwick has recalled Ollie Chessum to his starting lineup for the daunting trip to France on Saturday but otherwise kept faith with the underfire players who suffered England’s first defeat by Italy last weekend. The head coach has also made it clear that he expects his senior leaders – Maro Itoje, Ellis Genge and Jamie George – to step up in Paris as England seek to avoid their worst Six Nations campaign.After the defeat last Saturday, Sweeney took unprecedented action when issuing a statement before the championship was over, offering Borthwick qualified support but making clear improvements were needed against France as well as in the summer Nations Championship fixtures against South Africa, Fiji and Argentina.The RFU also demanded “open” dialogue with Borthwick and his coaches in the coming weeks and will hold what is sure to be an uncomfortable review in an attempt to address England’s rapid decline

about 11 hours ago
businessSee all
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UK, Germany and Italy ‘working together’ to navigate commercial shipping through strait of Hormuz - as it happened

about 10 hours ago
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Trump’s re-election may have helped Albanese – but the US war in Iran is creating economic conundrums

about 12 hours ago
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Cathay Pacific offers £20,000 Sydney-London flight amid disruption in Gulf

about 12 hours ago
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Crispin Odey was described as ‘sex pest’ by head of his hedge fund, court hears

about 12 hours ago
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VW to cut 50,000 jobs by 2030 amid Trump tariffs and falling Chinese sales

about 14 hours ago
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Oil prices fall and stocks rebound after Trump says Iran war could end ‘very soon’

about 17 hours ago