Subject Predicate Object
3dBo4hmS
a
Resource
Answer
Written answer
answer has question
gthvIRGi
answer has answering person
Neil John O'Brien
answer text
<p>We have frozen dental patient charges since 2020 whilst other similar charges such as for National Health Service prescriptions have increased. This is despite rising inflation and increases in costs of delivering NHS care. The uplift of NHS dental charges by 8.5% from 24 April 2023 will raise important revenue for pressurised NHS budgets and NHS dental services following COVID-19 restrictions and we consider it to be a proportionate rise as it remains below the Consumer Prices Index which rose by 17.9% since December 2020 and represents a £2 increase for a Band One course of treatment.</p><p> </p><p>The qualifying criteria for the range of exemptions to NHS dental charges and support through the low-income scheme remain unchanged. Just under half of NHS dental patients were treated free of charge in the 2021/22 financial year.</p><p> </p><p>We are expecting to increase NHS dental charges further from April 2024, with decisions on the level to be determined nearer the time.</p>
answer given date
answer has answering body
Department of Health and Social Care
written answer has answering body
Department of Health and Social Care
Department of Health and Social Care
answering body has written answer
3dBo4hmS
answering body has answer
3dBo4hmS
gthvIRGi
question has answer
3dBo4hmS
Neil John O'Brien
answering person has answer
3dBo4hmS