I would like private dente treatment..?
any advice links would be great thanks !
Answer:
Yeah you can pay for a dental scheme but then your tied to that scheme and maybe certain dentists. Or like me you just hunt around for what you want done and when you want it done and flash the plastic. Straight filling comes in about 60 quid and a double root canal job cost 700 quid. Many dentist web sites give some example prices but you pays your money and you makes your choice and you are the patient so you does what you want.
In my opinion dentist grossly overcharge I have a friend who was charged £800 for a set of false teeth, another was charged £200 for one crown, Hell that's more than a Plumber earns Disgraceful
You should understand that dental insurance in not insurance at all, but prepayment. They simply call it insurance. In the long run it will cost you more if you have insurance. If you think about it, you can see why this must be true.
There are network plans and fee for service plans. Some of the network plans do not work well at all. Some do.
You know how the internet works. You never know if the link you get is just hype and it is a little hard to tell if it is.
My advice is to bite the bullet and get it done. I didn't mean that literally.
You can do either, but don't forget you can't insure yourself against problems you've already got so if you need treatment already then you may need to pay per filling, etc. to begin with and then pay a monthly insurance charge once you are dentally fit.
Some insurance schemes such as Denplan, Practice Plan and the like are run through the dental practice- others are independent and cash is claimed back by the policyholder once treatment is completed and paid for.
Best independent link I can find is the British Dental Association
http://www.bdasmile.org/about/index.cfm?...
And in response to SAPPER, do plumbers need to spend 5 years at university earning nothing and amassing debt?
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