THE crisis in Scotland’s NHS dental
service was graphically illustrated yesterday when Holyrood ministers
announced that 32 Polish dentists were being recruited in an attempt to
close a growing gap in provision.
The Scottish
Executive, which has pledged to recruit a total of 200 dentists by
2008, also disclosed that several of the country’s health boards are in
discussion with an independent health company to provide NHS dental
treatment in those areas facing the most severe service problems.
Over the past year in parts of Scotland there have been repeated scenes
of hundreds of people queueing to register with a dentist. Thousands of
people throughout the country have been forced to re-register as
private patients after their dental practice opted out of the health
service.
The first 12 dentists
from Poland are due to arrive in Scotland by the end of next January
and will provide treatment for about 20,000 patients.
The move to recruit
both the Polish dentists and the independent dental company to provide
NHS services comes less than a week after Scotland’s dentists rejected
a £295 million package from the Executive that would have allowed
thousands of people the opportunity of treatment on the NHS.
The Dental Action Plan
(DAP) was intended to help to lure dentists back from the private
sector, but talks broke down after the British Dental Association said
that the package would force its members to treat a set number of
adults on the NHS before receiving the money.
The Executive sees the
level of commitment to the NHS from the dentists as the main stumbling
block to resolving the situation.
However, the
association maintains that it rejects the ministers’ “all-or-nothing”
approach. It said that many dentists working privately or in mixed
practices were demonstrating commitment to the NHS by treating children
or those exempt from charges. Last night the dentists’ body gave a
dusty response to the latest Executive move, describing it as a
short-term measure.
Lewis Macdonald, the
Executive’s Deputy Health Minister,by contrast, said that the decision
to recruit the Polish dentists was “great news” for thousands of people
who would now be able to register for NHS dental treatment. “We want to
give people the chance to opt-out of private arrangements which they
have been forced into and to return to the NHS as we increase the
number of directly employed NHS dentists across the country,” he added.
Mr Macdonald said
talks were going on with the private company Integrated Dental Holdings
(IDH) to provide services in areas where access to an NHS dentist has
become a problem for many. “While IDH is a privately owned corporation,
it will undertake NHS work directly and will have no financial interest
in de-registering NHS patients,” Mr Macdonald said.
The first group of 12
Polish dentists will be employed as NHS salaried dentists in Fife (6),
Forth Valley (3) and Argyll & Clyde (3).
A further 20 dentists
from the Eastern European country, which this year joined the European
Union, will arrive in Scotland to take up posts in April and September
next year.
IDH is the largest
company operating NHS dental practices in the UK. It is a
privately-owned limited company with about 550 dentists and 850,000
registered patients. If final agreement is reached with the Executive,
the company will set up practices in Grampian, Highland, Dumfries and
Galloway and Borders.
Health boards in these
areas would enter into personal dental services pilot contracts to
deliver services. This would be the first time such contracts have been
used in Scotland and, according to the Executive, they have the benefit
of guaranteeing a minimum of 5 years access to NHS services to all
categories of patients.
Opposition
parties welcomed the news, but said that it fell far short of what was
needed to solve Scotland’s dental crisis.
BPP
Comment: This is a truly disgusting state of affairs. Thousands of
dental and medical students cannot get places or because of the Marxist
New Labour policy of refusing grants, many British students are opting
for courses in the Arts which is all they can afford. Its time we gave
our students GRANTS not loans! Its an investment in Briatin's future-
and we need mathemiticians, scientists, engineers and doctors not just
hundreds of thousands of sociologists and poets!