The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Dentistry disasters cost NHS £3million each year

- By Pat Hagan

NHS hospitals are paying out nearly £3 million a year in legal costs following catastroph­ic errors during dental surgery, latest figures have revealed.

Every year, thousands of patients with complicati­ons that require treatment beyond the skills of normal dental practices are referred to hospital for surgery.

The payouts are being used to settle claims with patients for a wide range of mistakes, including having the wrong teeth pulled, suffering unnecessar­y pain or nerve damage, or not being asked for their consent before having invasive treatments.

And litigation against NHS hospitals for dental disasters is on the rise, according to the analysis of data published in the British Dental Journal.

Researcher­s from University College Hospital in London trawled through data held by

NHS Resolution, the body that handles negligence claims on behalf of the health service.

Between April 2015 and April 2020, there were 492 dental negligence claims, resulting in total payouts of £14 million.

Almost £4 million went on compensati­ng NHS patients for

‘Clinical incidents can be distressin­g for patients’

delays in treatment, while a further £2.4 million was paid out to those left with nerve damage after an operation. There were also 33 cases where surgeons accidental­ly took out the wrong tooth, costing more than £600,000 in legal bills.

In a report on their findings, the researcher­s said: ‘Hospital dentistry claims are smaller in cost than other surgical specialiti­es but are on the rise.’

However, the researcher­s also stressed that the NHS sometimes pays out on claims rather than fight them in court, as it can be more cost-effective than ramping up huge legal bills.

British Dental Associatio­n spokesman Peter Dyer said:

‘We understand how distressin­g these clinical incidents can be for patients.

‘Dentistry units in hospitals are scarce and oversubscr­ibed and this is likely to have contribute­d to delays and failure to treat, which accounts for nearly half of the cases reviewed.’

In 2018, surgeon Panagiotis Stathopoul­os, a specialist in maxillofac­ial surgery at the

Royal Derby Hospital, was struck off by the General Medical

Council after a tribunal found that he had lied repeatedly to cover up his removal of the wrong tooth during an operation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom