Just a third of Notts adults see their dentist during pandemic

Just a third of adults attended dental appointments as the coronavirus pandemic brought disruption to Nottinghamshire, figures suggest.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

NHS England data shows a steep drop in people visiting the dentist in 2020 and 2021, with millions across England missing check-ups and treatment.

The figures are proof NHS dentistry is at the ‘last chance saloon’ and in need of reform, according to the British Dental Association.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

In the two years to December 2021, 235,612 adults in Nottinghamshire attended an appointment , 35 per cent of the population.

That is significantly down on the 24 months to December 2019 when 324,476, 49 per cent, attended.

Between March and June 2020, dental practices were instructed to close and defer routine, non-urgent dental care to limit the spread of Covid-19.

According to the BDA, more than a year's worth of dentistry has been lost to the pandemic so far, with the association's research showing 40 million fewer courses of treatment were delivered between April 2020 and December 2021.

Read More
Zip wire planned at King’s Mill Reservoir adventure park

Problems

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Eddie Crouch, BDA chairman, said every missed appointment translates to bottled up problems and widening oral health inequality, which could see patients left requiring more extensive and costly interventions.

The association has urged the Government to deliver ‘meaningful and urgent reform’ to the industry, saying underfunding, cuts and failed contracts had also contributed to the problems within the sector.

Mr Crouch said dentists were leaving the NHS and warned recovery from the pandemic would be impossible ‘if ministers fail to halt the exodus from a demoralised workforce’.

He said: “For the sake of our patients real, urgent reform cannot remain stuck on the Government's 'too difficult' list.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

A Department of Health and Social Care spokeswoman said it had taken ‘unprecedented action’ to support the sector during the pandemic, adding: “Levels of dental treatment are increasing and urgent care is back to pre-pandemic levels thanks to the hard work of staff.”

Data relating to children is recorded on an annual basis and shows the volume of dentist visits, which declined significantly during the pandemic, showed signs of improvement last year.

Nationally, 5.1m children were seen by an NHS dentist in the year to December, 43 per cent of the child population.

This was up from 3.6m (30 per cent) the year before, but still significantly down on the 7m (58 per cent) seen in 2019, prior to the pandemic.

Last year, 42 per cent of Nottinghamshire's child population – 71,361 youngsters – saw their dentist, compared with 30 per cent in 2020 and 59 per cent in 2019.

An NHS spokeswoman said more than 600 urgent dental health hubs had been established in response to the pandemic and said NHS England had provided financial support to dental practices while Covid-19 prevented them from working at full capacity.

She added: "The NHS is now getting key services like dentistry back to pre-pandemic levels – injecting an extra £50 million into routine services, which will help provide check-ups and treatment."

A message from Jon Ball, your Chad Editor: Since 1952, your Mansfield and Ashfield Chad has helped the voices of our community be heard - and with your support, we'll continue for generations to come. Subscribe to our print edition via chad.co.uk/subscriptions #buyapaper