Do Dentists overcharge ?

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Anyone who works for a living and has to pay dentists in 'earned income'?.
Is it fair- NON-Workers and New EU & Non EU members of our community get it all free ?.
Totally sick of it all . :cry:
 
Roma gypsies get everything for free - and I've never seen one who works yet.
 
Dentists must come second only to vets in what they charge for their work. When I was unemployed I had to go to the emergency dentists, after toothache all weekend. He offered to take out the offending tooth and said it would cost £42 for the extraction. When I explained I was on benefits, he offered a prescription for toothache tincture and painkillers, instead of extraction, also saying he was rather busy.
 
Apparently the dentists doing those awful piano keyboard jobs earn in excess of £300k per year.

And our local dentist has a scale of charges on the wall and one of them is for some kind of implant bridge - and prices START at £!2,300.
 
I go to an NHS dentist which obviously is much cheaper than private but even so: She says 'How are you?' looks in my mouth, blurts out a load of numbers and says 'See you in six months. All of three minutes work. I then have to pay £17.00.
 
I go to an NHS dentist which obviously is much cheaper than private but even so: She says 'How are you?' looks in my mouth, blurts out a load of numbers and says 'See you in six months. All of three minutes work. I then have to pay £17.00.


Obviously, they don't have to pay the nurse or receptionost. Or pay for the hi-tech kit. They clearly didn't have to do years of studying either.
 
Obviously, they don't have to pay the nurse or receptionost. Or pay for the hi-tech kit. They clearly didn't have to do years of studying either.

The way my last tooth was pulled out, I did wonder what training the dentist had done. He didn't have a dental nurse either and the receptionist was his wife. The only high tech piece of equipment he had was the fluorescent lamp fixed to the ceiling. :wink: :wink:
 
Obviously, they don't have to pay the nurse or receptionost. Or pay for the hi-tech kit. They clearly didn't have to do years of studying either.

The way my last tooth was pulled out, I did wonder what training the dentist had done. He didn't have a dental nurse either and the receptionist was his wife. The only high tech piece of equipment he had was the fluorescent lamp fixed to the ceiling. :wink: :wink:short course


You shouldn't have gone to a short course CCC :shock: :)
 
Obviously, they don't have to pay the nurse or receptionost. Or pay for the hi-tech kit. They clearly didn't have to do years of studying either.

The way my last tooth was pulled out, I did wonder what training the dentist had done. He didn't have a dental nurse either and the receptionist was his wife. The only high tech piece of equipment he had was the fluorescent lamp fixed to the ceiling. :wink: :wink:short course


You shouldn't have gone to a short course CCC :shock: :)

He did, it took 6 weeks and cost £5,000 but at least he could service boilers aswell.

Andy
 
The way my last tooth was pulled out, I did wonder what training the dentist had done. He didn't have a dental nurse either and the receptionist was his wife. The only high tech piece of equipment he had was the fluorescent lamp fixed to the ceiling. :wink: :wink:

That's because you accidentally went into the opticians next door mate :mrgreen:
 
There was a Dental School where I was a student. Guys Hospital in London to be exact.

A first year qualified doctor started on £12k back then including London weighting. Some first year dentists I knew paid more than that in tax in their first year of practice. And they went home to their own bed every nightl.

I also remember at that time you could buy a flat in the Barbican centre for £8k. That was three times a London student grant, so in theory you could have bought one on your student grant.
 
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