Como
Well-Known Member
I had a friend who was a Dentist, now this was some years ago but it made no sense to be paid by the NHS and accept NHS patients so he did not. I forget the details but how they paid was weird.Politely, I'm not sure I can agree with that. You could argue the problem is that it's badly run, but the counter is that it's been substantially underfunded for a long time now, and the problems now are primarily down to that issue.
(See below a report from the FT, hardly a lefty rag.)
As for chemists, haven't they always been private entities? Regardless, if independence and/or privatisation solves the problem, why are we suffering so badly in terms of dental health?
UK health spending over past decade lags behind Europe by £40bn a year
Health Foundation points to scale of NHS cuts, while NAO shows service struggling with inflation and staff shortageswww.ft.com
I certainly did not pay for dental care beyond a tooth brush and I think that is somehow more a national trait for reasons I do not know. Personally I have memories of bad Dentistry from a child and that probably influenced me.
Now not a UK thing but quite a few people in the US go to Mexico for major stuff, much cheaper and you get a holiday included.
Most NHS spending occurs in the last few years of life, logically that makes no sense. Spending should be concentrated on where you get the biggest impact. An old fart like myself or someone with their life in front of me, we have our priorities back to front.