Funding could be cut from the NHS dentistry budget

16 February 2023

The British Dental Association (BDA) has warned that hundreds of millions are set to be taken away from NHS dentistry during an unprecedented access crisis, on track to amount to over a tenth of the service’s £3 billion budget.

The British Dental Association (BDA) has warned that hundreds of millions are set to be taken away from NHS dentistry during an unprecedented access crisis, on track to amount to over a tenth of the service’s £3 billion budget.

The Health Service Journal report that senior leaders in NHS England have major concerns that the service is set for record “underspends” in 2022/23. The BDA stresses this “clawback” does not reflect a lack of demand for dentistry but the reality of a recruitment crisis across the frontline, which is leaving practices unable to fulfil their contractual commitments.

Freedom of information data acquired by the BDA shows no sustained recovery in dentistry delivered in the first nine months of this financial year. With activity – measured in Units of Dental Activity (UDAs) - delivered monthly averaging a little over three-quarters of pre-covid levels up to January 2023, the BDA stress this all but rules out a full recovery, even if practices pull out all the stops, given ongoing workforce problems.

Given this performance, the BDA estimate this will translate into losses of well over 10 per cent of dentistry’s gross budget, potentially as high as £400m, given current trends.

The BDA warn record breaking clawback levels will push some practices to bankruptcy or speed moves to the private sector. This reflects long-term issues with the failing and under-funded NHS dental system, with a contractual framework in which many dentists are no longer prepared to work. Clawback increased by 310 per cent between 2014-20.

Eddie Crouch, British Dental Association Chair, said, “Patients will struggle to comprehend why this Government is about to take hundreds of millions from the frontline during an access crisis.

“This cash will end up plugging holes in other NHS budget lines. It’s not because there’s any lack of demand for dentistry, it’s simply that practices are working to a failed contract and can’t fill vacancies.

“Any progress requires reform and investment, but instead dentists are getting kicked while they’re down. 

“This will push dedicated NHS practices to the wall or to the private sector and leave whole communities with no options.”

References available on request.