Dentists across England will receive increased payments for providing urgent patient treatment under new government reforms designed to enhance access to care.
The changes, published by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) following extensive consultation, are anticipated to benefit millions of patients.
The reforms aim to incentivise dentists to offer more urgent appointments for critical issues such as severe pain, infections, or dental trauma.
Additionally, patients requiring complex care, including treatment for advanced gum disease or multiple decaying teeth, will now be able to book a single, comprehensive package of treatment, rather than enduring several separate visits.
This streamlined approach could save patients approximately £225, according to the DHSC.
These government initiatives coincide with a separate proposal from the Policy Exchange think tank, which suggests introducing annual dental vouchers worth £150.
This initiative, backed by Sir Sajid Javid, a former health secretary, is put forward as a means to "end the postcode lottery" in dental care, potentially helping to "save NHS dentistry" and "fix our national smile."

Shiv Pabary, chairman of the British Dental Association’s (BDA) general dental practice committee, said the changes being announced “are the biggest tweaks this failed contract has seen in its history”.
“We do hope changes can make things easier for practices and patients in the interim, but this cannot be the end of the road,” he added.
“We need a response proportionate to the challenges we face, to give NHS dentistry a sustainable future.”
The latest changes form part of the Government’s wider plan for NHS dentistry, which includes more urgent appointments, and supervised toothbrushing for three to five-year-olds.
It comes as Gareth Lyon, head of health and social care at Policy Exchange, said NHS dentistry “is in a truly shocking state”.
“A majority of people are not receiving NHS dental support at all – including millions of children,” he added.
Policy Exchange suggests that a universal £150 voucher could be used to pay for dental insurance or a capitation plan, where a monthly fee goes towards regular care such as check-ups and hygiene appointments.
People could also have the option of taking their voucher to any General Dental Council-registered professional for non-cosmetic treatment.

All registered dentists should be required to accept the voucher, the report said, and should also be required to accept children as patients at current NHS dental rates.
Policy Exchange claims that in the two years to March 2024, 18 million adults and 6.6 million children in England have accessed an NHS dentist, the equivalent of 40 per cent of adults and 57 per cent of children.
Mr Lyon added: “The results are felt not just in poor dental health and avoidable pain and suffering for patients but also in far higher costs to the health system as dental problems are diagnosed late or not at all, requiring extensive and expensive hospital treatment.
“We’re also missing out on early diagnosis of cancers and other health problems dentists can help identify.
“We are proposing to abolish the postcode lottery where a lucky few get subsidised treatment, opening up the whole of our dental system to everyone – putting patients in control, ending the failed prices and subsidy system and incentivising early treatment and diagnosis.
“It is time to take radical action to save NHS dentistry and to fix our national smile.”

Tthe BDA rejected the Policy Exchange suggestion, and chairman Eddie Crouch said it came “with the sound of barrels being scraped”.
“NHS desperately needs investment, but this policy would not end dental deserts. It could easily mean spending more money on less access,” he said.
“A struggling service urgently requires real reform and sustainable funding. We don’t need distractions, or detours into ideological comfort zones.”
Last week, figures revealed that levels of tooth decay among adults in England are similar to those seen in the late 1990s.
The latest Adult Oral Health Survey provided the first picture of oral health in England in more than a decade.
It found more than four in 10 people (41 per cent) had obvious signs of rotten teeth when examined, up from 28 per cent in 2009 and similar to levels in 1998.
When using the most sensitive measure of tooth decay – which also assesses enamel decay – almost two thirds (64 per cent) had decay in one or more teeth.
Elsewhere, official data published earlier this year shows as many as six in 10 children in some areas have rotting teeth by the age of five.
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