Desperate patients are resorting to horrific DIY dentistry as they find it impossible to get NHS treatment.
Jamie Ellison, 49, who has been unable to sign up with an NHS dentist for 15 years, used pliers to take out his own tooth. He said: “I would not recommend it. It was a desperate thing to do.”
Mr Ellison, from Huddersfield, West Yorks, said: “I have not seen a dentist for about 15 years. God knows, I have tried.”
Nicola, a part-time nurse in Sussex, told of being unable to find an NHS dentist to repair a broken tooth.
She told the i Paper: “I had to resort to buying a pair of long-nose pliers to try and extract the tooth.”
She made it worse and ended up going to a private dentist, which cost £650, which she is still paying off.
Hannah Whelan, from Manchester, who works in the NHS, told of being unable to afford root canal extraction.
She said: “I used to super glue the infected molars and take paracetamol. I managed to finally get an extraction done after fainting at work from the pain.”
There has an exodus of around 3,000 dentists since the last Covid lockdown, many saying a perverse payment structure leaves them carrying out some NHS treatments at a loss, getting the same payment for carrying out one filling as they do for a patient requiring three or four.
Data released under Freedom of Information laws, shows 2.3 million NHS dental appointments in England in April, down from 2.9 million in March, and down from a pre-pandemic average of 3.5 million.
Lack of access to NHS dentists was a major issue in the Tiverton and Honiton by-election, where the Lib Dems defeated the Tories.
In the Mid Devon local authority, which covers Tiverton, there were 2,500 NHS dental appointments in April, down from 4,600 pre-pandemic.
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In Wakefield, where Labour trounced the Tories, monthly appointments have fallen from 25,000 to 16,000.
April was the start of the new financial year when dentists decide how much NHS appointments they can commit to. The data signifies that more are withdrawing from the NHS.
Eddie Crouch, British Dental Association boss, said: “Every vacancy that goes unfilled translates into thousands of patients unable to access care.
“Ministers have failed to grasp we can’t have NHS dentistry without NHS dentists.”
The BDA says direct annual Government funding for dentistry is now down £880million from 2010 levels, while the Tories have repeatedly increased patient fees above inflation. Neil Carmichael, of the Association of Dental Groups, told the i Paper: “It is terrible that people are feeling forced to do DIY dentistry and pulling out their teeth with pliers. It is not how we should be doing things in modern Britain.”
Eddie Crouch added: “The barriers facing millions of people in pain are made in Westminster. Until government turns the page on a decade of underfunding and failed contracts we will not see progress.
“The Tiverton by-election underlines the real political cost of failure to fix the crisis in NHS dentistry.
“It’s easy to understand why the inability to access basic healthcare services is resonating on the doorstep.”
BDA polling shows 45% of dentists have reduced their NHS patient commitment since the pandemic by an average of more than a quarter.
The survey of 2,200 dentists last month showed 75% were likely to reduce, or further reduce, their NHS works in the next 12 months.
Some 45% say they are likely to go fully private.
A Government spokeswoman said: “We are working closely with the NHS to reform the dental system – including negotiating improvements to the contract.”