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Dentistry

Chris Huhne: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many dentistry practices are (a) serving NHS patients and (b) open to take on new NHS patients in each primary care trust in Hampshire. [79281]

Ms Rosie Winterton: Information on the number of practices serving national health service patients and open to take on new NHS patients is not available centrally.

Provisional management estimates on the number of signed and rejected contracts in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight Strategic Health Authority (SHA—now part of South Central SHA) area is available and is provided in the following table by primary care trust.

The table also sets out the estimated level of NHS services associated with accepted contracts compared with that of rejected contracts, based on weighted courses of treatment, or units of dental activity.

A contract may be for either a practice or an individual dentist.

Primary care trusts are using the funding associated with rejected contracts to commission additional services from other dentists.

Number of contracts signed Number of contracts rejected Estimated level of NHS services associated with accepted contracts compared with rejected contracts (percentage)

Blackwater Valley and Hart Primary Care Trust (PCT)

26

6

86.9

East Hampshire PCT

31

6

82.4

Eastleigh and Test Valley South PCT

20

11

82.3

Fareham and Gosport PCT

34

8

79.8

Isle of Wight PCT

19

0

100.0

Mid-Hampshire PCT

21

7

95.9

New Forest PCT

25

8

92.3

North Hampshire PCT

38

6

81.8

Portsmouth City PCT

30

4

91.5

Southampton City PCT

34

4

99.2

Hampshire and Isle of Wight SHA

278

60

89.8


Sir Peter Soulsby: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many dentists have left the NHS in the East Midlands strategic health authority in the last three years, broken down by parliamentary constituency. [86369]

Ms Rosie Winterton: The information requested is shown in the following table:


4 Sep 2006 : Column 2075W

4 Sep 2006 : Column 2076W
General dental services (GDS) and personal dental services (PDS): Number of national health service dentists who have left the GDS or PDS in the specified strategic health authorities (SHA) areas, by parliamentary constituency, during the 12 months ending 31 March each year
2004 2005 2006

Trent SHA

54

50

41

Leicestershire, Northamptonshire and Rutland SHA

20

23

27

Amber Valley

0

1

2

Ashfield

1

4

3

Bassetlaw

0

0

4

Blaby

3

5

1

Bolsover

0

2

0

Boston and Skegness

2

1

0

Bosworth

0

0

1

Broxtowe

2

4

1

Charnwood

1

1

0

Chesterfield

4

3

0

Corby

1

2

2

Daventry

3

4

1

Derby North

5

1

2

Derby South

5

1

2

Erewash

1

3

2

Gainsborough

0

0

0

Gedling

3

2

0

Grantham and Stamford

1

0

2

Harborough

3

0

0

High Peak

5

4

1

Kettering

0

2

1

Leicester East

0

0

5

Leicester South

0

0

2

Leicester West

0

1

2

Lincoln

5

5

4

Loughborough

0

1

4

Louth and Horncastle

3

2

2

Mansfield

2

2

2

Newark

1

1

1

North East Derbyshire

2

2

1

North West Leicestershire

0

0

1

Northampton North

1

3

2

Northampton South

4

2

3

Nottingham East

4

5

2

Nottingham North

2

1

3

Nottingham South

2

1

6

Rushcliffe

2

3

2

Rutland and Melton

2

0

3

Sherwood

2

1

0

Sleaford and North Hykeham

0

1

0

South Derbyshire

2

2

1

South Holland and The Deepings

1

0

0

Wellingborough

3

3

0

West Derbyshire

2

0

0

Notes: 1. Leavers indicate that the dentist had an open GDS or PDS contract as at 1 April of the previous year but no GDS or PDS contract as at 31 March of the specified year. 2. A dentist may have left a GDS or PDS contract within more than one parliamentary constituency or both SHA areas, in which case they would appear in figures for each individual constituency and SHA. For this reason, figures for individual constituencies and SHAs cannot be summed. 3. Data has been provided for years ending 31 March 2004 to 2006, which are prior to the recent SHA boundary changes. The SHA boundaries supplied are as they were at the time. 4. A dentist with a GDS or PDS contract may provide as little or as much NHS treatment as he or she chooses or has agreed with the primary care trust. Information concerning the amount of time dedicated to NHS work by individual GDS or PDS dentists are not centrally available. 5. Dentists consist of principals, assistants and trainees. Prison contracts have been excluded. 6. Areas have been defined using the Office of National Statistics all fields postcode directory. Sources: The Information Centre for health and social care NHS Business Services Authority

Charles Hendry: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many dentists from those countries which joined the EU in 2004 have applied for full registration as dentists in the UK. [87443]

Ms Rosie Winterton [holding answer 24 July 2006]: I refer the hon. Member to the reply I gave on 20 July 2006, Official Report, column 659W.

Mr. Lansley: To ask the Secretary of State for Health pursuant to her answer of 14 July 2006, Official Report, column 2150W, on dentistry, if she will make a statement on the position at the end of May; and when she intends to publish information relating to the end of June. [87692]

Ms Rosie Winterton: Information on the number of contracts signed in dispute that were still in dispute as of 31 May and 30 June, and the proportion of the total contracts signed that this represents by strategic health authority was made available on 4 August and is available at:

www.performance.doh.gov.uk/dental_contracts Copies have also been placed in the Library.

David Simpson: To ask the Secretary of State for Health what the gross cost was of (a) dental fees for items of service and (b) dental treatments in each of the last five years; and how much of the cost was borne by patients (i) in total and (ii) as a percentage of the overall cost in (A) England and (B) each region. [88137]

Ms Rosie Winterton: The main element of national health service dental services in the last five years has been the primary dental care services provided by dentists working within the general dental services (CDS) or personal dental services (PDS) pilots.

The tables, which have been placed in the Library, show the available CDS data on gross item of service fees and patient registration payments, together with the cost of certain additional payments made to dental contractors, and patient charge income for CDS contracts in England and each strategic health authority area for the financial years 2001-02 to
4 Sep 2006 : Column 2077W
2005-06. The data excludes certain elements of gross costs, such as employers' superannuation contributions, vocational trainee salaries and expenses, and the cost of salaried general dental practitioners and emergency dental services, where data is not readily available in this localised format.

The PDS pilots were generally not based on item of service fees but regular contract payments for defined services. Localised data on PDS expenditure is only available for the financial year 2004-05. The data includes regular PDS contract payments but excludes some additional payments authorised locally. It also excludes the cost of PDS services directly managed by NHS trusts such as some dental access centres. Data on PDS charge income may also be incomplete because some primary care trusts (PCTs) instituted temporary arrangements to collect charge income directly from dentists. These factors make it very difficult to make comparisons between the 2004-05 and 2005-06 data, when PDS pilot schemes rapidly expanded, and earlier periods.

Charge income levels will have been influenced by the proportion of services delivered by PDS contractors, who until the reform of primary care services introduced from April 2006 were required to
4 Sep 2006 : Column 2078W
apply the patient charge regime originally designed for the item of service remuneration system operating within CDS. This patient charge regime was not sensitive to the new ways of working and treatment patterns associated with PDS contracts, and generally resulted in lower levels of charge income within PDS pilot schemes. In addition, as noted above, some PCTs have collected some patient charges direct from PDS dentists locally and this income may not be reflected in the centrally recorded data. All of these factors will have distorted the proportion of patient charge income recovered particularly in 2004-05 and 2005-06.

David Simpson: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many (a) fillings and (b) extractions were carried out on children’s teeth in (i) England and (ii) each region in each of the last five years. [88138]

Ms Rosie Winterton: The spreadsheet provides data for the year ending 31 March 2002 for England and by health authority and for the years ending 31 March 2004, 2005 and 2006 for England and by strategic health authority.

Information was not centrally analysed for 2002-03. This could now be provided only at disproportionate cost.


4 Sep 2006 : Column 2079W

4 Sep 2006 : Column 2080W
General Dental Services (GDS) and Personal Dental Services (PDS): Number of fillings and extractions carried out on children’s teeth in England by strategic health authority as at year ending 31 March 2004-31 March 2006
Teeth filled Teeth extracted
2004 2005 2006 2004 2005 2006

England

3,343,589

4,039,247

4,089,417

662,257

829,758

867,077

Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire SHA

119,452

158,090

146,862

23,527

28,726

27,631

Bedfordshire and Hertfordshire SHA

113,177

144,103

158,115

25,090

33,917

36,637

Essex SHA

92,558

118,772

118,059

21,567

27,670

27,697

North West London SHA

121,961

155,334

169,541

24,863

30,114

32,464

North Central London SHA

92,317

119,781

118,478

15,763

19,655

20,221

North East London SHA

132,772

172,385

179,513

25,663

33,922

34,131

South East London SHA

111,610

145,516

142,081

19,583

24,860

24,630

South West London SHA

83,318

104,945

113,895

14,228

18,457

18,101

Northumberland, Tyne and Wear SHA

117,992

137,451

121,743

16,888

21,315

19,740

County Durham and Tees Valley SHA

111,088

131,880

122,541

21,488

25,918

26,142

North and East Yorks and Northern Lincs SHA

103,086

119,438

116,112

21,922

25,997

25,880

West Yorkshire SHA

180,180

211,079

187,146

34,198

42,972

48,257

Cumbria and Lancashire SHA

139,212

161,740

155,680

26,441

33,874

31,886

Greater Manchester SHA

217,933

230,926

232,711

36,968

42,425

45,756

Cheshire and Merseyside SHA

161,502

142,952

175,445

35,160

36,816

48,308

Thames Valley SHA

103,711

134,556

151,356

25,740

34,529

37,133

Hampshire and Isle of Wight SHA

104,768

123,547

121,060

18,322

21,765

22,135

Kent and Medway SHA

112,951

136,339

141,587

26,761

31,712

33,451

Surrey and Sussex SHA

158,011

197,306

196,914

31,846

40,193

40,676

Avon, Gloucestershire and Wiltshire SHA

132,987

171,479

165,955

26,316

35,017

34,708

South West Peninsula SHA

108,090

114,977

130,300

18,936

21,663

28,027

Dorset and Somerset SHA

70,777

86,761

87,064

12,693

15,362

16,710

South Yorkshire SHA

108,404

122,846

112,415

17,934

23,867

22,135

Trent SHA

156,460

182,314

181,995

34,647

43,544

43,253

Leics, Northamptonshire and Rutland SHA

93,047

124,633

126,345

20,731

25,586

27,279

Shropshire and Staffordshire SHA

86,778

108,946

106,102

17,529

23,103

23,830

Birmingham and The Black Country SHA

132,303

181,663

206,961

27,954

40,254

44,834

Coventry, Warks, Herefordshire and Worc SHA

80,385

99,488

103,441

19,907

26,525

25,425

Note: Year ending March 2006 data are for PDS and GDS. All previous data are for GDS only. Source: The Information Centre for health and social care and NHS Business Services Authority


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