Dentist: Powys patient's 100-mile round trip for appointment

1 year ago 28
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Media caption,

"I just feel that I can't fit into the system at the moment. I feel forced out of it"

By Gwyn Loader

Chief correspondent, Newyddion S4C

A 73-year-old man has to travel 100 miles each time he goes to the dentist due to a lack of practices taking NHS patients.

Dafydd Williams has lived in Newtown, Powys, for 20 years but his dentist is in Telford, Shropshire.

Powys was one of 10 councils the BBC found last year did not have any dentists taking new adult NHS patients.

The Welsh government said it had pledged £2m to secure 112,000 extra dental appointments.

However, the British Dental Association (BDA) criticised that claim, accusing the Welsh government of "cooking the books" and "making misleading claims".

"I'm angry to be honest that we have to travel so many miles to see a dentist," said Mr Williams.

"We go twice a year for a check-up, but of course if we need to have any treatment and they say we have to go back in 10 days or a fortnight - that's another day gone."

According to the BDA, new NHS contracts issued by the Welsh government put an emphasis on seeing new patients, but it claims this is at a detriment to those already registered at practices.

The BDA claims that for every new NHS patient taken on, "a dozen historic patients could lose access to dentistry".

Image source, Dafydd Williams

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Dafydd Williams, 73, has not been able to register with a Welsh dental practice in 20 years

Dentist and BDA representative Tristan Roberts has worked for the NHS since graduating, but said he now feels he is being "forced out of it".

"I think it [NHS dentistry] is on a precipice at the moment and is hanging by a thread," he told Newyddion S4C.

"I think we're losing what dentistry is about these days. It's all about funding and cutting costs."

The BBC has learned of several dental practices in different parts of the country that have brought NHS dentist services to an end, turning to private healthcare only.

This week, a letter was sent to patients of the Marquess Dental surgery in Llanfairpwllgwyngyll, Anglesey, stating that it was "impossible" to continue providing the "standard of care they wish" to NHS patients so it would be only offering private dental care from the beginning of April.

Image source, Getty Images

Image caption,

Mark Drakeford said more than a thousand additional dental appointments have been made for children in Powys in the last 8 months

Welsh Liberal Democrat leader Jane Dodds, who represents Mid and West Wales in the Senedd, said she had discovered that in November last year, there were 794 children under 18 on a waiting list for an NHS dentist in Powys alone.

She said: "There's a two-tier system here in Wales where, if you have the money, you can pay and you can afford it.

"But if you don't, then you either just have to wait until an appointment becomes available or you have nowhere to go to register locally."

In the Senedd on Tuesday, First Minister Mark Drakeford said 1,100 additional dental appointments have been made for children in Powys in the past eight months.

The Welsh government said: "Changes to the NHS dentistry contract, offered to dental practices since last April 2022, also includes a requirement to see new patients.

"This means an estimated 112,000 new NHS patient appointments will be possible in Wales this year."

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