Daily Mail

Patients hit by big bills to fix shoddy dental work

- By Sean Poulter Consumer Affairs Editor

denTIsTs are refusing to fix mistakes they have made – leaving patients with massive bills.

In some cases, the victims are being left with charges running to hundreds of pounds to repair their teeth.

The criticism comes from Citizens Advice, whose offices and helplines have seen a rise in patients in dispute with their dentist, both nHs and private.

The charity helped people in england and Wales with around 4,000 dental care problems last year, up by 9 per cent on the year before.

Issues included patients querying the charges made by dentists, problems with payments and delays with the complaints process.

But substandar­d service was the biggest issue in 2015 to 2016. An analysis of 354 cases showed around three- quarters involved treatment that actually caused the patient further problems.

Issues included dentists cracking healthy teeth during a treatment, fillings that came out and dentures that did not fit.

In one case, a patient paid thousands of pounds for a crown that did not fit, could not be removed and which led to bruising of their face. In almost a quarter of these cases, patients said dentists refused to offer a refund or a free-of-charge repair, despite rules saying they should.

In one case, a woman in her 70s paid £500 to have her teeth capped. The dentist chipped her two front teeth during the treatment but refused to repair the chips or offer compensati­on.

The woman then had to pay £700 to have the damage fixed by another dentist.

Gillian Guy, chief executive of Citizens Advice, said: ‘If a dental treatment causes more problems for the patient, the law states that in most cases the dentist should be offering to repair this at no extra charge.

‘Asking patients to pay could put their health at risk if they are unable to afford the further treatment.

‘dentists need to make sure that they aren’t charging patients for their mistakes and that they provide patients with clear informatio­n about how they can claim compensati­on if something goes wrong.’

under the Consumer rights Act, patients who go private are entitled to have any problems fixed by their dentist or, if it cannot be put right, at least a partial refund.

on the nHs, issues with treatments such as fillings, inlays or crowns must be repaired or replaced within 12 months.

‘Charging for their mistakes’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom