Caernarfon Herald

Five N. Wales dental practices now ‘under review’ as part of closure plan

HEALTH CARE GIANT BUPA SET TO CLOSE OR MERGE 85 CENTRES ACROSS THE UK

- Owen Hughes

BUPA Dental Care is set to cut 85 dental practices in a move that has put five practices in North Wales under threat.

The healthcare giant, which provides NHS and private dental care, said the 85 practices will be closed, sold or merged later this year, bringing the total number of practices in the UK down to 365.

All the practices will remain open as usual in the meantime. It affects 1,200 staff across the UK, amid a national shortage of dentists and “systemic” challenges across the industry.

The healthcare group said patients at the affected practices have not been able to access the NHS dental service they need.

The five North Wales sites ‘under review’ are:

Total Orthodonti­cs Colwyn Bay Wrexham Dental Implant Clinic Bupa Dental Care Rhyl Bupa Dental Care Denbigh Bupa Dental Care Penrhyn, Penrhyndeu­draeth

Bupa said it would redeploy affected staff where possible to different areas of the business. The provider has not been able to recruit enough dentists to deliver NHS care in many practices for months and in some cases years, it said.

National shortages of dentists have been worsened by the NHS contract model, and because of an increased demand and complexity of care since the Covid pandemic, Bupa warned.

The industry has also been affected by inflation and higher energy prices, increasing the cost to run patient services.

Mark Allan, general manager for Bupa Dental Care, said: “As a leading dental provider in the UK, our priority must be to enable patients to receive the care they need.

“For the majority of affected practices, this decision will allow commission­ers to procure local providers for the NHS contract, tailoring services and investment to the needs of the local community, thereby providing a better opportunit­y for patients to continue access to NHS dental services.”

Bupa said it would be handing back the dental contract to the NHS for practices that are set to close, meaning that commission­ers can find a new provider to continue treating patients in the area.

Mr Allan went on: “We fully understand the impact that today’s decision has on our patients and our people within these practices.

“This decision has not been taken lightly and closure is a last resort.

“Despite our continued efforts, the dental industry is facing a number of significan­t and systemic challenges that are placing additional pressure on providing patient care, in particular recruiting dentists to deliver NHS dental care.”

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