Whether his Department has made an assessment of the potential merits of providing support to veterans in obtaining NHS dental care once they have left the armed forces.
We are working to improve access to National Health Service dentistry, which will also benefit members of the Armed Forces community, including our respected veterans who have spent their careers defending our country.We are also supporting more than 1,500 children in British military families overseas through our supervised toothbrushing programme.Free NHS dental care is available to people who meet the following criteria:aged under 18 years old, or aged under 19 years old and in full-time education;pregnant or have had a baby in the previous 12 months;being treated in an NHS hospital and the treatment is carried out by the hospital dentist (patients may have to pay for any dentures or bridges);receiving low-income benefits, or aged under 20 years old and a dependant of someone receiving low-income benefits; andreceiving War Pension Scheme payments, or Armed Forces Compensation Scheme payments and the treatment is for your accepted disability. From April 2026, we began introducing a package of reforms to address some of the most pressing issues that dentists and dental teams have been experiencing. These reforms will prioritise those with the greatest need, shifting care away from clinically unnecessary check-ups.We are committed to fundamentally reforming the dental contract, with a focus on matching resources to need, improving access, promoting prevention and rewarding dentists fairly, while enabling the whole dental team to work to the top of their capability.