
Crawley: Minister makes vow over 'dentistry crisis'
A minister has vowed to tackle a shortfall in dentistry appointments after figures reveal thousands of people in the South East are in need of urgent dental care. The Integrated Care Board (ICB) said 53,450 people were in need of treatment, prompting health minister Stephen Kinnock to promise to confront "the NHS dentistry crisis".Mr Kinnock, who was speaking following a meeting with NHS dentists in Crawley, said the government will roll out 700,000 extra dental appointments nationally.Dr Kellie Downie, principal dentist at the Crabtree Clinic in Crawley, said the current pay does not reflect the work they do.
She added: "One issue is the current contract leads dentists to be really under-incentivised to work in the NHS because often the payments and the remuneration for working in the NHS just doesn't match the level of care that we provide."So often that means it just not financially viable for dentists to see NHS patients."
Mr Kinnock said the government would make NHS careers "more appealing to dentists" in order to "increase capacity for more patients".Statistics from the GP Patient Survey 2024 show one in four patients in Kent, Surrey and Sussex who tried to see an NHS dentist in the past two years were unable to do so.
Jason Wong, chief dental officer for England said there were still "many people experiencing difficulties" accessing NHS dental services."We are working with local systems to prioritise this," he said."We are incentivising dentists to work in underserved areas so that all areas of the country can receive the care they need."Jacob Lant, chief executive of National Voices, a charity that represent health care and social groups, said repairing the oral health crisis "requires a sustained effort".Mr Lant added local NHS leaders needed to work "creatively" so all patients' needs are met. "We need to ensure available capacity is targeting those most in need," he said."Whether treating an infected tooth or ensuring cancer and transplant patients get the dental check-ups they need before starting treatment."

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
From Cork to Maidenhead: An Irish nurse's story
A nurse who moved from Ireland to Berkshire in 1948 at the age of 19 to join the newly created National Health Service (NHS) was a "pioneer", her daughter has McCarthy was one of thousands of Irish women recruited to train and work in British hospitals after the end of World War Davies said her mother, who died last year aged 95, "absolutely loved" her job as a to Radio Berkshire ahead the 77th anniversary of the NHS on 5 July, she said her mother told her it had been "very strict" in the early days. The NHS took control of 480,000 hospital beds in England and Wales in 1948 but it was short of 48,000 nurses so an active recruitment drive was launched in the time, nurse training opportunities in Ireland were limited and expensive, making the chance to train for free in British hospitals with live-in accommodation highly the 1960s there were about 30,000 Irish nurses working in the NHS. Ms Davies said her mother saw an advert and decided she wanted to first spent a year working at a hospital in Highgate, London, on an orthopaedic ward before an outbreak of tuberculosis (TB), she said."About summertime 1949, mum and her friend wanted to apply for a job in Maidenhead," she said."I think working a year on the TB ward was just getting to them, they were seeing a lot of death."Nora spoke fondly of her time in the NHS, said Ms Davies, adding that during the early years she had said it was "very strict" but there was "a lot of camaraderie too".She said her mother had told her of dances at the local church hall which the off-duty nurses would attend and where Nora met her future husband. Ms Davies' daughter Ciara has retraced Nora's journey from Cork to working at Maidenhead General Hospital in Berkshire, as part of her university said: "I started in Ireland, we went to the original green rooms in O'Donovan's where the [nursing] interviews had taken place."Then to where she caught the bus from in Cork. We saw a little bit of Maidenhead but the original building for Maidenhead General Hospital was no longer there."There were some surprises about her life that I didn't know, such as learning about tuberculosis and what her life was like on the TB ward."Nora worked as an NHS nurse for 50 years, retiring at the age of story has been featured in a book, titled Irish Nurses in the NHS - An Oral History, which explores the life experiences of the Irish migrant co-author Prof Louise Ryan said the NHS described how it was "actively recruiting" in Ireland, with advertisements in national and local papers. NHS recruiters travelled throughout the country and carried out interviews with young women in local Ryan said: "Their travel was paid, they earned a salary while they trained - plus they got accommodation in the nurses' home."If you can image parents waving their children off on this mammoth journey across the sea to England – knowing there was secure accommodation was very reassuring – they were very well looked after." You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
'I believe routine smear test saved my life'
"If it wasn't for that, I wouldn't be here to tell my story."Toni Smith from Eastwood, in Nottinghamshire, went for a routine smear test when she was 28-years-old and believes doing so saved her screening is for human papillomavirus (HPV), which causes most cervical cancers, and women between the ages of 25 and 64 are offered it every few more than five million women are not up to date with the test, according to the government. Just 68.8% of women currently take up the offer of cervical cancer screening - well below the NHS England target of 80%.Toni told the BBC that after going for a routine smear test, HPV was found and she was later diagnosed with cervical cancer in February 2019. The mother-of-two was later offered a range of treatments by the NHS and chose to have a hysterectomy. 'Please, just go' The 36-year-old was in remission for five years until July last year when she got the all said: "I think my reflection is life is only a proportion of what goes on if you don't attend."It's uncomfortable, but that's going to save your life – it saved mine."Toni urged women to attend cervical screening and added: "Please, please just go."NHS England has now announced from January, a test which can be done at home that contains a long cotton-wool bud to swab the lining of the vagina, will be said she thinks the concept is an "amazing idea" and added: "The home testing kits gives that benefit to the woman, you haven't got to go somewhere, you don't have to feel uncomfortable, it's done in your own time."The Department for Health and Social Care in England said the scheme would tackle "deeply entrenched barriers" that keep women away from cervical can be due to embarrassment, discomfort, lack of time as well as religious or cultural concerns.A recent trial showed the rollout of home test kits across England could increase the proportion screened to 77% over three years.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
South London man shares his distress over Royal Mail delays
A man says he and his unwell mother have gone almost two months without receiving critical NHS appointment letters due to ongoing postal delivery failures in south Marwaha, who lives with his mum in a flat in Hackbridge, claimed since April they had not received letters in the post which had led to missed appointments."I have diabetes, high blood pressure, and I've had a bad infection recently. My mum has diabetes too. She needs those appointments, and they're just not arriving," he Mail told the Local Democracy Reporting Service that deliveries to Amit Marwaha's address had been taking place as normal and the company took "the timely delivery of mail very seriously". Mr Marwaha, who has lived in the property for 20 years, said he has also received multiple letters intended for others, including neighbours and people living on entirely different a result, Mr Marwaha said his mother was "panicking" about where her private health information might be being delivered the NHS letters, they are also missing financial documents, including bank statements and utility bills, and worry that sensitive information could also be misdelivered, he Marwaha said his mother was "really behind on her bills" after not receiving them."My neighbour has come to give me my letters sent to their house," he said. He said he had repeatedly raised concerns with local postal workers, but was told there was no post for Marwaha said he had made numerous complaints to Royal Mail, only to be told the post would arrive shortly - but these promises have not yet been fulfilled."They said I would receive all my mail in 72 hours after I complained, but none of it came," he said. "They've never even come back to me or said sorry."Last week, it was reported that Royal Mail performance data shows 71% of first-class post in Sutton, where Hackbridge is located, was delivered on time between January and March 2024, far below the 93% legal target. 'Extra safeguards' In a bid to confirm something was wrong, he posted a letter to himself almost four weeks ago. "It still hasn't come," he said. "I knew then something was wrong."I would like to get my mail, so would my neighbours. It's really stressed me out."Royal Mail said, according to its records, post was delivered to Mr Marwaha's address on five separate occasions between 12 and 23 June.A spokesperson said "extra safeguards" had been put in to ensure post was delivered to his flat."Two long-serving postmen, who are familiar with the residents and their circumstances, regularly speak with the customers and let them know whether or not mail has arrived that day," they added.