Going to the dentist is something that many would want to avoid – but how about if you also faced a penalty fine?
Going to the dentist is something that many would want to avoid – but how about if you also faced a penalty fine?
More than 40,000 people a year in England are getting fines of £100 – from an automated system that dentists say is hitting the most vulnerable.
They warn that people such as dementia sufferers are unfairly getting caught up in a system meant to stop fraudsters from getting free treatment.
The NHS accepts there is a problem with errors and is promising changes.
The fines, about £4m per year, are being applied by a random screening process that checks on whether people going to the dentist are really eligible for free treatment.
But dentists say rising numbers of people with dementia, or those with learning difficulties, are being unfairly fined for something as simple as ticking a wrong box in confusing paperwork.
When these have been challenged, about 90% have been overturned as having been incorrectly applied.
The British Dental Association says the problem seems to be increasing and with an ageing population is only likely to get worse. (BBCNEWS)