Govt must commit to dental policy implementation - report

The Government must commit to urgent implementation of the national dental policy, which was published seven years ago, according to the Joint Oireachtas Health Committee report on dental services to be published later today.

Govt must commit to dental policy implementation - report
Govt must commit to dental policy implementation - report Photo: RTÉ News

The Government must commit to urgent implementation of the national dental policy, which was published seven years ago, according to the Joint Oireachtas Health Committee report on dental services to be published later today.

The report, seen by RTÉ News, says too many children are leaving primary school without ever having had a dental screening.

It says the capacity requirements to deliver intended public dental services, including for children and special care patients, must be set out.

In his forward to the report, committee chairperson Pádraig Rice of the Social Democrats says there is a "deepening crisis" in dental services.

He notes that the National Oral Health Policy, Smile agus Sláinte, published in 2019, is still awaiting implementation.

The committee's report says the medical card scheme is "haemorrhaging dentists" and the number of dentists contracted to provide public services has halved in a decade.

It details that in 2023, fewer than 104,000 children out of an eligible body of 208,000 children received dental screening.

The committee's report also notes that the existing dental legislation is over 40 years old, putting the public at risk.

It calls for the Heads of Bill, for new legislation, to be published within six months, to replace the existing legislation.

An improved patient safety and regulatory framework is needed, it adds.

Other recommendations in the report include a strategic dental workforce plan, improved system capacity and efficacy, and the development of a modern, general dental service contract, including a public-work only density contract.

It says the Government must publish and fund a time-bound implementation plan for the dental health policy, recognising that progress has been significantly delayed and that unmet need continues to grow
The Joint Health Committee comprises members of Fianna Fáil, Fine Gael, Sinn Féin, the Labour Party and Independent senator, Tom Clonan.

Source: This article was originally published by RTÉ News

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