240419 | Fluoride could be added to drinking water in Cornwall due to growing lack of NHS dental care for children
Submitted by InYourArea and ... on Sat, 20/04/2024 - 20:36.
Fluoride could be added to drinking water in Cornwall
19th April
By
Lee Trewhela
Local Democracy Reporter
Dentist (Image: free for use from pxhere.com)
Fluoride could be added to drinking water in Cornwall in a bid to help
tackle the growing lack of NHS dental care for children.
The suggestion that South West Water (SWW) add fluoride to the Duchy’s
drinking water water supply was made by Cornwall Council's Conservative
portfolio holder for health Cllr Andy Virr, who is also an emergency
department consultant at the Royal Cornwall Hospital in Truro.
He suggested the move as an amendment to a motion bought by
Independent councillor Jim McKenna for the council to do more to seek
the reinstatement of dental services for school age children in
Cornwall.
Fluoridating water reduces dental decay by impeding demineralisation
and enhancing the quality of dental enamel, both of which prevent dental
caries. The main adverse impact is the risk of dental fluorosis, which
can stain teeth.
Fluoridated water is currently supplied to ten per cent of the
population in England, the majority of which (92 per cent) receive it as
part of a fluoridation scheme. The remaining eight per cent receive it
because it occurs naturally in some water sources. Areas which include
added fluoride in their tap water include the West and East Midlands,
the North East, North West and Yorkshire and Humber. There isn’t
currently a fluoridation scheme in Cornwall.
Cllr McKenna’s suggestion that Cornwall Council’s leader Cllr Linda
Taylor writes to the Prime Minister and Secretary of State for Health
and that Cornwall’s six MPs are asked to use their influence to help
secure more dentistry for Cornish children went down well with fellow
councillors at a meeting of the full council in Truro this week.
He also asked that Cllr Taylor strongly encourages the Cornwall
Integrated Care Board (ICB), through its commissioning responsibilities,
to target resources on improving access to dental services for pupils
throughout the county.
The motion was inspired by a petition set up in January by a Cornish
mother of two school age children, who had found it impossible to source
dental treatment for her children without paying for private dental
care.
Cllr McKenna said: “Last year 54.6 per cent of under-18s were unable
to access dental treatment in Cornwall. The percentage of tooth decay in
Year 6 children here in the Duchy was 26.3 per cent compared to the
South West average of just over 12 per cent. Perhaps most worryingly of
all, the extraction of teeth continues to be the most common reason for
children aged between six and ten to require urgent medical admission to
hospital.”
Jim McKenna, Independent Cornwall councillor for Penzance Promenade and former chief executive of Penwith District Council
He pointed out the severe shortage of general access to NHS dentistry
throughout Cornwall, meaning that residents can either try to access the
emergency dental service, which is limited and heavily oversubscribed,
be forced to pay for private treatment or simply not have treatment at
all.
The council was told there has been positive movement with the
announcement last month that the local authority, Smile Together Dental
CIC and Peninsula Dental Social Enterprise have teamed up to improve the
oral health of children aged between nine months and five years across
Cornwall, with three new programmes. This £149,000 initiative, sponsored
by Go Cornwall Bus Company, will help thousands of younger children in
Cornwall to have better oral health and will hopefully result in a
significant reduction in emergency hospital treatment.
Cllr Philip Desmonde, who seconded the motion, praised the above
initiative but added: “The bad news is inadequate or non-existent NHS
dental treatment for children of school age. This is leading to far too
many children going to hospital for tooth extraction.”
He added that only 14 per cent of dentists carried out NHS work
nationally. “This is scandalous. Forty two per cent of dentists work
only 30 hours per week or less. There is a very clear resource problem,”
said Cllr Desmonde.
He said that BUPA Dental Care had closed its Liskeard dental practice
leaving only practices in Bude, Launceston and Penzance. “In Camborne,
Redruth, Pool and Hayle there are no NHS dental practices. It is not
good enough, things must change.”
Cllr Thalia Marrington said it was a matter which had affected her
family personally. “We were kicked off our dentists and it was utterly
impossible to get back on. My children, just recently, got in at a
dentist in St Austell but I still haven’t found one. This is something
that really affects people who can’t afford to go private. It is going
to create a huge inequality.”
Cllr Matt Luke said there wasn’t an entire NHS dentist in Clay
Country, an area of high deprivation, and welcomed the recommendation.
Cllr Connor Donnithorne said the waiting list time for his two-year-old
son to see an NHS dentist was “eyewatering – and that’s happening to
thousands of families across Cornwall”.
Cllr Virr proposed the amendment recognising the impact of adding
fluoride to the water can make in terms of reducing dental disease. “It
particularly benefits the most vulnerable in our community who may have
the worst food, the worst oral hygiene and the worst access to
dentistry.”
The motion was carried, as was his amendment that the council supports
the addition of fluoride to Cornwall’s drinking water subject to review
by the authority’s health scrutiny committee. If the outcomes of the
review support the proposal, the council will write to SWW requesting
the addition of fluoride to our drinking water.
- Printer-friendly version
- Login or register to post comments
- Permalink
Contributions
- Angarrack Defibrillator Team (25)
- Angarrack Inn (336)
- Angarrack Methodist Chapel (3)
- Carol (15)
- Gail (1)
- GordonG (12)
- Hayle Development Group on Facebook (5)
- Hayle Harbour Authority (4)
- Hayle Town Council (5)
- louise (1)
- Lynne (94)
- Mal (1)
- MattBuckley66 (9)
- Neil (22)
- Neils Garden Care (9)
- Russell (21)
- Secretary - Christmas Lights (123)
- Steve (3)
- webmaster (5049)
Book page
Similar
- 230809 | Nearest NHS dental practice to Cornwall taking new patients
- 230730 | Practice Comparison: Praze-An-Beeble Surgery; Bodriggy Health Centre | 2023 GP Patient Survey
- 220627| The ICS will replace Kernow CCG from July 1 to provide a single NHS voice in Cornwall
- 210519| Boss Kate Shields is leaving Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Trust
- 201202 | Campaign launched for a “new Edward Hain hospital” – but health chiefs prefer their existing plan at Penzance
Similar across site
- 240419 | Fluoride could be added to drinking water in Cornwall due to growing lack of NHS dental care for children
- 230809 | Nearest NHS dental practice to Cornwall taking new patients
- 230730 | Practice Comparison: Praze-An-Beeble Surgery; Bodriggy Health Centre | 2023 GP Patient Survey
- 220627| The ICS will replace Kernow CCG from July 1 to provide a single NHS voice in Cornwall
- 210519| Boss Kate Shields is leaving Royal Cornwall Hospitals NHS Trust
Recent comments
8 weeks 4 days ago
25 weeks 6 days ago
1 year 9 weeks ago
1 year 11 weeks ago
1 year 11 weeks ago
1 year 20 weeks ago
1 year 33 weeks ago
2 years 5 weeks ago
2 years 15 weeks ago
2 years 27 weeks ago