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Fixing NHS Dentistry

Inquiry

Two-fifths of the adult population in England saw an NHS dentist in the 24 months up to March 2024 – this is down from just under half of the adult population pre-pandemic. There were 483 fewer dentists providing some NHS care in England in 2023-24 compared with 2019-20. The previous Government published its Dental Recovery Plan in February 2024.  This aimed to increase access to NHS dentistry services, aspiring to deliver more than 1.5m additional courses of treatment, or 2.5m appointments total, in 2024-25.  

The Health and Social Care Committee launched an inquiry into NHS dentistry in 2022, following a survey that showed 90% of practices across the UK were not accepting new adult NHS patients. Its 2023 report called for a  Fundamental reform of NHS dentistry to end a ‘crisis of access’. The Public Accounts Committee’s (PAC) 2019 report into penalty charge notices in healthcare found that the rules for claiming free prescriptions and dental treatment were confusing and needed to be changed. 

The National Audit Office published its own report conclusions from its investigation into the Dental Recovery Plan in November 2024. It found that the plan was unlikely to deliver its target of 1.5m additional treatments, and that even if the target was reached, it would still be 2.6m fewer treatments per year than pre-pandemic levels. It further highlighted a £392m underspend in 2023-24 across the NHS dental budget. 

Based on the NAO report, the PAC will hear from senior Government officials on delivery of better access to NHS dentistry and progress on the plan, with likely topics including:  

  • The dental contract; 
  • Falls in the number of dentists; 
  • The current picture on Government spending to support access to NHS dentistry. 

The Committee is unable to help with individual cases.  If you need help with an individual problem you are having, you may wish to read the information on Parliament’s website about who you can contact with different issues

Please look at the requirements for written evidence submissions and note that the Committee cannot accept material as evidence that is published elsewhere. 

If you have evidence on this issue, please submit it here by 23:59 on Thursday 30 January.  

This inquiry is no longer accepting evidence

The deadline for submissions was Thursday 30 January 2025.

Reports, special reports and government responses

View all reports and responses
21st Report - Fixing NHS Dentistry
Inquiry Fixing NHS Dentistry
HC 648
Report
Response to this report
Treasury minutes: Government response to the Committee of Public Accounts on the Twenty-first report from Session 2024-25
HC 648
Government Response
Letter from the Interim Permanent Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Care and the Chief Executive Officer at NHS England relating to a follow up on the oral evidence session held on 13 February 2025 on Fixing NHS Dentistry, providing updates on “Golden Hellos, Rebasing contracts and contract reform, 18 March 2025
Inquiry Fixing NHS Dentistry
Correspondence
Letter from the Interim Permanent Secretary of the Department of Health and Social Care and the Chief Executive Officer at NHS England relating to the modelling error in the plan to reform NHS Dentistry, 11 February 2025
Inquiry Fixing NHS Dentistry
Correspondence

Oral evidence transcripts

View all oral evidence transcripts
13 February 2025
Inquiry Fixing NHS Dentistry
Witnesses Department of Health and Social Care, Department of Health and Social Care, NHS England, Jason Wong MBE (Chief Dental Officer England at NHS England & DHSC), and Ali Sparke (Director for Pharmacy, Optometry, Dentistry at NHS England)
Oral Evidence
Association of Dental Hospitals (FND0001)
The Association of Dental Groups (FND0002)
Dental Schools Council (FND0003)

Contact us

  • Email: pubaccom@parliament.uk
  • Phone: 020 7219 8480 (strictly media enquiries only – contact us via our email for general enquiries)
  • Address: Public Accounts Committee, House of Commons, London, SW1A 0AA