Government's dental plan

Please see below for a template press release on the governments new dental plan.


Please use this spreadsheet to localise the release accordingly. Data is organised by local authority area.

This template is for use in England.

Dental plan “too little too late” for [Tab 1 - Column B] children not seen by an NHS dentist in [AREA] 

[AREA] ’s Liberal Democrats have slammed the Government’s new dental plan as figures show [Tab 1 - Column B] children in [AREA] had not been seen by an NHS dentist in 12 months.

The research, commissioned from the House of Commons Library, estimates the number of children who weren’t seen by an NHS dentist in the year to June 2023, based on the latest data from the health service.

It shows a staggering [Tab 1 - Column C] of children who had not been seen by a dentist in [AREA] over the twelve month period.

In [AREA], [Tab 2 - Column C] of adults had not been seen by an NHS dentist in the two years to June 2023. That equates to [Tab 2 - Column B] people who went without NHS dental care over a 24 month period.

The Government’s new Dental Plan will see cash incentives for NHS dentists, mobile dental services and dental teams visiting schools and nurseries. 

It has previously been estimated that the NHS budget was underspent by a record £400m last year, due to dentists not finding it economic to take on NHS work. 

The Lib Dems are calling for a dental healthcare rescue plan to boost the number of appointments. The Liberal Democrats are also calling for reforms to guarantee access to an NHS dentist for everyone needing urgent and emergency care, ending DIY dentistry and “dental deserts”, and the removal of VAT on children’s toothbrushes and toothpaste.

Commenting Liberal Democrat spokesperson for [AREA], [NAME] said: 

“The government’s plans are too little too late for local families who have been left waiting in pain struggling to get a dentist appointment.

“It is appalling that so many children in our area are struggling to see an NHS dentist when they need to. We know that if children can’t access dental healthcare it can disrupt their eating, sleeping and learning. 

“Instead of these half-baked reforms, we need a proper rescue package for dental healthcare. That means guaranteeing access to an NHS dentist for everyone needing emergency care, boosting the number of appointments and removing VAT on children’s toothbrushes and toothpaste.”

ENDS 

Notes to editors

The research from the House of Commons Library

Tooth decay being the leading cause of hospital admissions for children aged six to ten

It has previously been estimated that the NHS budget was underspent by a record £400m last year, due to dentists not finding it economic to take on NHS work.