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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think that dentists should be on NHS?

50 replies

foureleven · 17/05/2010 12:45

In agony, tooth is infected (it even smells which is embarrassing) it has to come out but they want to charge £55 to look at it and a further £150 to take it out. I dont have that money!

OP posts:
BlueDragon · 17/05/2010 12:46

There are NHS Dentists arent there?

Spatchadoodledo · 17/05/2010 12:47

They are. You just need to phone around and find them, and then get one with spaces available!!

frasersmummy · 17/05/2010 12:50

thats bang out of order.. I had a wisdom tooth out a few months agoi... £30 all in

foureleven · 17/05/2010 12:51

Not round here for emergency appointments. Id have to wait about 6 weeks by which point I predict I will be dead.
And no one will come to my funeral because I will have lost all my friends due to grumpiness as in pain... and horrendous breath.

And even on NHS you have to pay. Just not quite as much.

OP posts:
foureleven · 17/05/2010 12:52

frasersmummy - shut up! Where do you live..?

OP posts:
foureleven · 17/05/2010 12:53

Oh shit sorry frasers mummy - I say 'shut up!' in RL meaning 'NO WAY?!' In a nice and jokey way... sorry

OP posts:
AMumInScotland · 17/05/2010 12:54

Are you on the books of an NHS dentist? You shouldn't have to wait 6 weeks for an appointment if you are registered with one.

You have to pay, same as you have to pay for prescriptions and spectacles, unless you are on a very low income or in an exempt group. Otherwise taxes have to go up even more.

foureleven · 17/05/2010 12:56

No I'm not with an NHS dentist... I could kick myself.

OP posts:
moominmarvellous · 17/05/2010 12:56

I think theres a website that identifies NHS dentists in your area with available spaces....

www.nhs.uk/Pages/HomePage.aspx

You could give that a go and that see if it's any good. I used that, or something similar, when I moved house and found an NHS dentist and GP quite easily from what I remember.

fernie3 · 17/05/2010 12:59

we have been on the waiting list for a dentist in our area for 2 years my husband is currently having work done we have paid for privately as the emergency nhs dentist will only do temporary fillings. The total is over £450! luckily they will allow you to pay in stages.
It should be NHS but there just are not enough spaces to go round!

JeezyPeeps · 17/05/2010 13:00

Our local hospital offers an out of hours dentistry service for emergencys. Might be worth considering?

LisaD1 · 17/05/2010 13:01

I didn't think an NHS dentist could refuse to treat in an emergency? My DH wasn't registered with a dentist at all and he had a really bad infection couple of years ago, the private dentist treated him as an nhs patient.

olderandwider · 17/05/2010 13:01

Do you have any dental hospitals/schools nearby? They often run emergency clinics free of charge

hotcrossbunny · 17/05/2010 13:03

Don't suffer in silence. The NHS should be able to sort you out as an emergency patient. I had a similar situation a couple of months ago, rang the NHS number and got antibiotics from an emergency cover dentist. then they found me an NHS dentist to register with. I think it's the NHS direct number 0845 4647 if you're in England. HTH. Toothache HURTS!

mountainmonkey · 17/05/2010 13:08

I know its a PITA trying to find an NHS dentist but most countries don't have any state dental care at all so I guess we're quite lucky really. Then again isn't it cheaper to be treated abroad...I remember reading something about dental tourism.

NestaFiesta · 17/05/2010 13:12

Dental care SHOULD be NHS, but getting into one is like finding hens' teeth. I was sent a list by by local authority of NHS dentists taking on patients and basically I need to learn to drive to bloody get to one ( 7 miles and 23 miles away). I feel we have all been cheated. My local dentist, only 500 yards away, takes private patients only as their NHS list is full.

Did I dream it or are we supposed to be entitled accessible and free or very subsisded state dental care?

thisisyesterday · 17/05/2010 13:14

foureleven, if you're in a lot of pain you can go to a&e and get emergency dental treatment

if it isn't painful then get booked in and wait the 6 weeks.. but ask them to ring you if they get a cancellation?

foureleven · 17/05/2010 13:15

OUUUUCH its painful...!

Will try NHS direct, thanks.

OP posts:
ButtercupWafflehead · 17/05/2010 13:16

Ring an NHS dentist and tell them you need an emergency appt.

I did this and they saw me that morning.

frasersmummy · 17/05/2010 13:24

at shut up...

I am just outside Glasgow...

I think I am really lucky Its a family practice dad has just retired and handed over to daughter

have been registered here since I was 7. I have just registered ds for nhs with them no bother at all

wannaBe · 17/05/2010 13:35

I think it's disgraceful that the kind of dentist treatment you are entitled to is like a lottery. It shouldn't be like that - Either everyone should be entitled, or no-one should.

CrispyTheCrisp · 17/05/2010 13:41

We have an emergency dental access centre for the County (kind of a central hub). They treated my infected wisdom tooth (took it out) and gave me names of NHS dentists with current vacancies. I was treated straight away, but was pregnant so not sure if that gave me priority?

Journey · 17/05/2010 13:42

Go to A&E. You shouldn't have to put up with that pain. Toothache is awful.

CrispyTheCrisp · 17/05/2010 13:43

Try this website for your nearest Dental Access Centre. Good luck

bruxeur · 17/05/2010 13:46

DON'T go to A+E with dental problems. You need a dentist, not a doctor. You will be given the above numbers and some pain relief, and told nicely to go away and find a dentist.

Unless you're actually septicaemic with the infection, in which case you're excitingly medical.

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