MaizieD
^I worded my 11:47:02 post so carefully because I do not believe everyone is getting what they need under our NHS/private dental system.^
That's assuming, DaisyAnne that one can even get NHS treatment from a dentist. There are no dentists in our area willing to take on NHS patients.
True. That makes a strong point about the need for additional NHS doctors, etc. However, dentistry is so clearly divided by the ability to pay that it is a clear example of what could happen, as I said above, under a health system that does not make the same health care possible for all. The next step from that, one I think some on the right would find acceptable, is that you may be able to pay less into the NHS if you have private insurance. Currently even when people have private insurance, we all have to pay what is deemed a fair charge for having an NHS system for all. That is fundamental, in my view.
I don't think private practices are necessarily the problem (although, I don't know enough to know they aren't). Setting out a list of what is and what isn't free, in the way the government have done in dentistry, immediately stops equality of opportunity.