Threads / Dentistry in England / Without a workforce sufficiently supported to deliver NHS d…
Committee Material Published 4 Apr 2025 ↗ View on Parliament

Without a workforce sufficiently supported to deliver NHS dental care, there will be no future for NHS dentistry and DHSC and NHSE have not yet done enough to address workforce issues. The total number of dentists delivering some NHS dental care is in decline and NHSE data showed that in March 2024 there were over 5,500 vacancies across the NHS dental profession with many of these going unfilled for over 180 days. Whether the issue is a lack of dental professionals altogether, or a lack of de...

Without a workforce sufficiently supported to deliver NHS dental care, there will be no future for NHS dentistry and DHSC and NHSE have not yet done enough to address workforce issues. The total number of dentists delivering some NHS dental care is in decline and NHSE data showed that in March 2024 there were over 5,500 vacancies across the NHS dental profession with many of these going unfilled for over 180 days. Whether the issue is a lack of dental professionals altogether, or a lack of dental professionals willing to take on NHS work, it is clear that there 6 is a need to go further on efforts to support the dental workforce. This is part Type: conclusion | Number: 6 | Response status: accepted Government response: The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. dentists is a key part of the government’s ambition to reform the dental contract. This work is underway but will take time. Whilst the new dental contract is developed, the government will consider making impr