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NHS Dental Crisis: Patients Turn to Risky Self-Treatment
15 Dec
Summary
- Patients travel over 100 miles or go private for emergency dental care.
- Some resort to risky self-treatment, including pulling their own teeth.
- NHS 111 call volumes for dental issues have risen by 20% recently.

Emergency dental care is increasingly inaccessible for NHS patients in England, compelling many to seek treatment privately or travel extreme distances. Research indicates individuals are facing waits for appointments and, in dire situations, resorting to risky self-care, such as attempting to extract their own teeth. This situation arises as people struggle to register with NHS dentists for routine care, leading to preventative issues being neglected.
Patients report significant challenges in obtaining urgent appointments, often spending hours on hold or being turned away. This has resulted in some traveling up to 110 miles, incurring substantial costs for private care, or even seeking treatment abroad. The consequences include worsening dental health, sleepless nights, and financial strain, with some borrowing funds or using savings.
Calls to NHS 111 concerning dental problems have surged by approximately 20% in recent months compared to the previous year. Healthwatch England urges the government to improve access by introducing a legal right to register with an NHS dentist and to publish monthly progress data on targets for urgent appointments.




