The British Dental Association has warned officials that planned cuts will devastate a service already on the brink.
In an open letter to Peter May, permanent secretary at the Department of Health, representatives of every field of practice in Northern Ireland stress, "If the axe falls on dentistry - indeed if there is a failure to provide needed investment - this service faces collapse. The price will be paid by patients across Northern Ireland."
Dental leaders say Northern Ireland faces 'a three-tier system', where those who can't get registered for NHS care but can't afford to pay privately are left without routine access, short of accessing emergency services.
The letter cites bleak evidence from the frontline, with the crisis on the high street being felt acutely across the community and secondary care:
- Oral cancers: Red flag referrals for suspected oral cancers from high street dentists to secondary care set at two weeks are currently running at 8.5 weeks in some areas.
- An access crisis in primary care: Last year the BBC found 90 per cent of practices were not accepting new adult patients and 88 per cent were not accepting child patients. Activity levels have only recovered to approximately 80 per cent of pre-covid levels. A workforce crisis is fuelling this access crisis, combined with unviable fees to dentists for providing NHS care. Sixty per cent of dentists intend to increase their amount of private work. Forty-one per cent of practice owners intend to decrease their health service work. This picture is set to worsen.
- Multi-year waiting times: The country has five to six-year waiting times for routine assessment for oral and maxillo-facial services; 219-312 weeks Hospital Orthodontic waiting times for patients with facial deformities; currently reliant on a surgeon from Wales to come over every two months to treat children with cleft lip and palate. Cuts could mean waiting times increase further and some treatments being no longer available in Northern Ireland.
- Widening health inequalities: Residents are twice as likely to have filled teeth as their counterparts in England, and children are three times as likely to have multiple teeth extracted under general anaesthetic. Children in our most deprived communities are least likely to be registered with a dentist (63 per cent registered in most deprived areas vs 80 per cent least deprived). Health inequalities will widen further if, as a result of reduced funding, access to the full range of dental services is reduced.
- Plummeting morale: Covid has had an enormous impact on the dental profession. 63.6 per cent of community dentists – treating the most vulnerable in society - say their morale is “low/very low”, with a key factor being the ongoing patient backlog. Existing difficulties accessing theatre space are having an impact on the vulnerable groups these dentists serve.
- A growing pay gap: Additional in-year funding will in effect not be available for pay uplifts here, rather, it will be prioritised to settle the £297m debt. Northern Ireland has a shameful track record of delivering late pay uplifts. The possibility of no uplift would have a devastating impact on recruitment and retention and the financial sustainability of practices. In hospitals, Dental Core Trainees (DCT) have a pay gap of up to 25 per cent compared to other UK nations. This is having a huge impact on recruitment with nine of 22 DCT posts currently unfilled.
Michael O'Neill, head of General Dental and Ophthalmic Services, wrote to dentists on May 3, 2023, that work is ongoing to secure savings and raise revenue across health budgets.