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Most people, if asked to name the least effective sector of the NHS, would settle without hesitation on dentistry. It has become a truism that NHS dentistry is beyond saving, as the middle classes desert it in droves. Ministers don't talk about it, unless coerced; it is the service that dare not speak its name.
Yet a contrarian view ought sometimes to be heard. Take, for example, the oft quoted statistic that the market for private dentistry has now overtaken that of the NHS. In simple cash terms that may be true. But a quarter of total spending in dentistry is cosmetic, which the NHS does not provide. Another quarter is on routine private dentistry, while the remaining half is spent on NHS dentistry. Given that private charges are much higher than those in the NHS, the half that is spent in the NHS buys far more treatments. In fact, 75-80% of dental treatments are still in the NHS, which has 27 million patients, against 6.7 million in the private sector.
This suggests that the old dog isn't quite dead yet, despite the potent images of huge queues forming whenever a new practice opens its doors and old ladies extracting their rotten teeth with pliers for lack of a dentist.
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