The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Checks on foreign dentists in NHS to be dropped to ease crisis

- By Michael Searles Continued on Page 2

FOREIGN dentists are to be allowed to work in the UK without taking an exam to check their qualificat­ions, under Government plans to solve the dental crisis.

Ministers plan to scrap the Overseas Entrance Exam currently required to allow dentists from countries outside of Europe to come and work in Britain.

The plans would mean dentists trained abroad would be able to start work in the NHS without a formal check on the quality of their education and have raised fears it will lead to substandar­d care.

About four in five NHS dental surgeries are not accepting new patients, which has caused a surge in teethrelat­ed A&E admissions, including among children with tooth decay. The dentists’ union accused the Government of trying to “a fill a leaky bucket” without addressing the real issues keeping the profession away from NHS work.

The proposals would see foreign dentists start working more quickly, with the regulator the General Dental Council (GDC) given new legal powers to provisiona­lly register dentists using its own judgment on their qualificat­ions.

Officials claim this will “ensure patient safety and quality of care are maintained”, while those on the new provisiona­l register would have to be supervised to work.

Dame Andrea Leadsom, the health minister, said the plan “would abolish red tape that currently prevents fully qualified overseas dentists from working in this country, while ensuring the high- est standards of care and patient safety”.

The shortage of NHS dentists led to hundreds of people queuing outside a new practice in Bristol from the early hours of the morning at the start of this month. It was the first in the city to accept new patients in more than six months and the police were forced to intervene as the practice had to turn patients away.

Patient groups are concerned the plans won’t fix the crisis, particular­ly if there is no obligation for foreign dentists to do NHS work.

Dennis Reed, the director of over-60s campaign group Silver Voices, said: “It is not the number of dentists that’s the issue, it’s the number directly concentrat­ing on NHS work. The worst

possible outcome of this would be for large numbers of overseas dentists to come over and concentrat­e on private work.”

The British Dental Associatio­n (BDA) said the “recovery plan” was unworthy of the title, and that there was “no evidence” overseas dentists were more willing to do NHS work than those already in the UK.

A record number of dentists are registered to practise with the GDC, the union said, but the number doing NHS work has fallen to 2016 levels because of

“tick boxes and targets”. It said the Department of Health had provided no modelling to back up its claims of “millions” of new appointmen­ts, and that there was no plan to increase capacity.

Eddie Crouch, the BDA chairman, said: “A broken contract is forcing dentists out of the NHS with every day it remains in force. Overseas dentists are no more likely to stick with a failed system than their UK colleagues. Ministers need to stop trying to fill a leaky bucket, and actually fix it.”

Currently, dentists who qualify outside of the European Economic Area are required to take an exam set by Britain’s dental regulator, the GDC. Dentists with qualificat­ions from 14 select universiti­es in Australia, South Africa, Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia and New Zealand, are also exempt from the exam, but only if they graduated before 2001.

Health leaders described the UK entrance exams as “red tape” and causing “lengthy delays” in dentists being able to register and start treating Brits.

It comes a week after the NHS announced its recovery plan to fix so-called dental deserts by giving dentists cash incentives to relocate.

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