Getting any other part of your body fixed is free, but teeth are very expensive.
@c4f7c8e1 @Flick 🇬🇧 @HebrideanUltraTerfHecate Is that why no one on that island gets braces? Sweet jeebus...
Yes. There is a reason for the cliche about brits having bad teeth. We have nowhere near enough dentists, so the few that we have can charge whatever they like.
@c4f7c8e1 @Flick 🇬🇧 @HebrideanUltraTerfHecate No shit? Solid career path for an ex-pat, no?
Maybe. Not sure if the NHS even hires new dentists anymore. There's not a single NHS dentist in my county that will accept new patients.
@c4f7c8e1 @Flick 🇬🇧 @HebrideanUltraTerfHecate How is that shit even possible? What the fuck? Is this the whole of Europe or?
Notice that nowhere in the list is any kind of disability benefits. https://www.nhs.uk/nhs-services/dentists/who-is-entitled-to-free-nhs-dental-treatment-in-england/
@bf74d669 @c4f7c8e1 @Flick 🇬🇧 @HebrideanUltraTerfHecate >cavity develops Time to get fucked https://cdn.nicecrew.digital/bfb686124de05cdfb5d345c860831dd7c7bdb9cf8c0e17dd5fe8c4075f553580.jpg
That only applies if you can find an NHS dentist! Also, pregnancy can really fuck up your teeth as your body prioritises giving vitamins, minerals and nutrients to the fetus. My teeth were perfect until I started having kids. They started falling apart, literally, not long after the first was born. When my grandparents' generation were young adults it was not uncommon for women to have all their teeth removed and replaced with dentures while their own teeth were still healthy. They thought it was inevitable, so may as well get it over and done with!
@c4f7c8e1 @bf74d669 @Flick 🇬🇧 @HebrideanUltraTerfHecate That's a hell of a fix there. What a weird little island...
When the NHS first came in, dental was included but it became very quickly obvious that it was costing an absolute fortune*, so they stopped it. *The nation actually had really bad teeth then. Until pretty recently we had very healthy but ugly teeth, that may be changing now that there are so few NHS (subsidised) dentists around. From 2016: In the study, published in the British Medical Journal, researchers in the UK and the US examined data from English and American dental surveys. The results showed that the average number of missing teeth was 6.97 for English participants, but 7.31 for those in the US. Additionally, people were more likely to suffer poor dental health in the US because of socio-economic factors. https://dentistry.co.uk/2016/01/06/english-have-better-teeth-than-americans/