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CAMPAIGN Rural dentists


n By Mark Metcalf


THE BATTLE FOR RURAL DENTISTS


‘Toothless’ fight bears its fangs


We are all well aware of the difficulties in getting an NHS dentist – but rural communities face particular problems. In the recent election run-up the Toothless in England campaign, fed up with the dental health of rural citizens being ignored, ensured all rural candidates knew of their anger.


Unite’s Mark Jones from Suffolk, who works at UK Power Networks and chairs the Unite London and Eastern Energy and Utilities regional industrial sector committee, led the charge (in a personal capacity). Starting off at a local level, the campaign soon went regional and then national and is now the patient’s voice.


Toothless’ says “Campaigners are conscious that rural communities face extra difficulties in finding an NHS dentist. Their efforts have


drawn support from the British Dental Association, a trade union representing 16,000 dentists working in the NHS and private sector.


“What Toothless have achieved is remarkable. Their examples of people that have suddenly had to resort to DIY dentistry have certainly helped, along with other patient representative groups like Health Watch,” said Eddie Crouch, BDA national chair. “It’s really important that the patients voice is heard and the huge volume of people that have now written emails to their MPs and raised it up the agenda is due in large part to Toothless.”


According to Mark Jones, “By bringing the NHS dental crisis into sharp focus within local and mainstream media outlets, we have driven the agenda in Westminster, so much so that we have put our case directly to MPs on the Health and Social Care Committee, which has held an inquiry into NHS dentistry, as well as the Department for Health and Social Care.”


North Yorkshire BDA member Ian Gordon, a dentist for 40 years who works in the agricultural market town of Stokesley, now hopes the focus will, following the general election, lead to fixing the problems. He has experienced dentists quitting NHS work. “It’s not because they can earn lots more in the private sector.”


Gordon estimates that an average private dentist might treat 15 patients daily, half the figure for NHS practices.


32 uniteLANDWORKER Summer 2024


“The NHS way of working is very high-pressured and target driven. And it drives people to distraction. They eventually say, ‘It’s not for me. I want a slower pace of life.’ Working privately means dentists have a more pleasant way of working, and they can spend time with the patient discussing options and not be on a treadmill.”


Rural communities face additional problems in getting NHS dentists to look after them, says Ian because “the numbers wanting to work in rural areas is much smaller. Many have arrived in the UK to train or, if qualified, work and largely they want to live in cities where they have strong family ties rather than in rural North Yorkshire or the Lake District or Lincolnshire.”


According to Gordon, who hates hearing of patients forced to extract their own teeth, his group practice on which he sits on the executive, treats 300,000 NHS patients, many from rural areas, annually and also “provide a lot of emergency care because the local NHS commissioners, who are good, in the Northeast, Yorkshire and Humber region have done a lot to help create access sessions. We run about 20 sites on a weekly or daily basis where people can be assured of being seen. It does make life lots easier for patients.”


Mark Jones wants to help rural and coastal communities avoid needing emergency care by getting the NHS to develop a system, which has


Getty Images


Photo courtesy of Toothless in England


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