Urgent reform urged as dental professionals under investigation report suicidal thoughts and quitting dentistry

Urgent reform urged as dental professionals under investigation report suicidal thoughts and quitting dentistry

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Dental Protection has called for radical reform to how the General Dental Council (GDC) investigates dental professionals, as new research reveals significant numbers are experiencing


suicidal thoughts or quitting dentistry as a result of their investigation. In a survey of 125 dental professionals who have been investigated by the dental regulator in the last five years,


82% said the investigation had a detrimental impact on their mental health, 96% said it caused stress and anxiety, 14% quit dentistry due to the investigation, and a further 38% considered


leaving. Over a quarter (28%) said they experienced suicidal thoughts during the investigation. In the survey, 82% of respondents said the length of the investigation impacted their mental


health most, with some lasting several years. In total 74% said the tone of communications from the GDC affected them most, with one respondent describing it as 'cold and harsh'.


Dr Raj Rattan, Dental Director at Dental Protection, said: 'Dental Protection supports dental professionals from the moment a GDC complaint is received, to its conclusion at a hearing.


We see how a GDC investigation takes its toll on the mental health of those involved day in day out, yet these survey results are still shocking and make for difficult reading. 'One


dental professional quitting dentistry, or worse, experiencing suicidal thoughts due to a GDC investigation is one too many and this should act as a wake-up call for both the GDC and the


government. 'Members told us the length of their GDC investigation had the most impact on their mental health. The Professional Standards Authority, in its 2021/2022 review of the


regulator, said the GDC is taking too long to progress fitness to practise cases and that the number of open older cases has increased. It described the delays as 'serious and


ongoing'. 'GDC reform would give the regulator discretion to not take forward investigations where allegations clearly do not require action, to focus on the most serious


allegations and process them more quickly, and the government must progress this with more urgency. But the GDC can and should make more progress in the meantime - it must deliver on its


2021 commitment to tackle the delays to cases itself, through alternative ways of managing the caseload and increasing the size of its team. 'Having your fitness to practise called into


question can be devastating, and there is no reason why the GDC cannot communicate with dentists with more compassion. For example, it should acknowledge the impact the investigation may


have on mental wellbeing in its letters, and ensure its correspondence is accessible across all devices. It should also consider introducing an independent 24/7 wellbeing support service.


'Finally, we would urge the GDC to keep its promise to publish data on registrants who have died by suicide during a GDC investigation as soon as possible. This will demonstrate


transparency and be the first real step in understanding the extent of this problem.' RIGHTS AND PERMISSIONS Reprints and permissions ABOUT THIS ARTICLE CITE THIS ARTICLE Urgent reform


urged as dental professionals under investigation report suicidal thoughts and quitting dentistry. _BDJ In Pract_ 36, 7 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41404-023-2054-2 Download citation *


Published: 10 July 2023 * Issue Date: 10 July 2023 * DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41404-023-2054-2 SHARE THIS ARTICLE Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this


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