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The NHS is being urged to roll out mobile dentists to more ‘deprived’ parts of Hampshire to help with demand. In April 2019, before COVID-19, 51 per cent of the 1,831,473 people in Hampshire, Portsmouth and Southampton had seen an NHS dentist in two years. However, this fell significantly during the pandemic, where practices had to close for three months between March and June 2020 and operated at reduced capacity until July 2022.

The NHS figures show that in February 2022, the number of patients attending dentists fell to 35.74 per cent. Access has, however, started to improve, with 41.



8 per cent of the Hampshire population seeing a dentist regularly as of February 2024. NHS Hampshire and the Isle of Wight Integrated Care Board (ICB), which is responsible for planning NHS services, said it has made efforts to increase accessibility to dentists and has introduced mobile units where check-ups can be carried out. In February 2024, it launched a partnership with the charity Dentaid to deliver care via the NHS to communities with health inequalities.

Patients, including families experiencing poverty, people at risk of homelessness, children, and new and expectant mothers in areas at the highest risk of poor dental health, can make appointments to see the dentist on a mobile dental unit. During the Hampshire County Council health and adult social care select committee (May 21), councillors called for more mobile dental units in other deprived areas of the county. They said the.

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