Peterborough Dental Access Centre
Dental clinic
James Mold
Absolutely fantastic today. Sarah and Lydia worked together seamlessly even though I would not let Sarah’s hand leave me, I have severe anxiety when it comes to dentistry work but they made me feel a lot better and eventually I agreed to have my tooth removed. Lots of numbing, slight pressure but didn’t even feel the tooth leaving the socket! Was a tooth that really needed to come out. Thank you both of you so much 🙏🏻 ready for a pain free Christmas 🎅
Lina Maz
Kerrie Drew
I called at 8am last Monday and in 8 minutes I was off the phone with an appointment for 10.30am. I had a wisdom tooth that needed to come out, I was given 1 weeks antibiotics and appointment for 8am today to have it removed. Went back at 8am today, my tooth was out by 8.30. All the staff were lovely from booking the appointment to the dentist herself. Would highly recommend if you’re ever in an emergency
Nana Nana
The worse place. One week I call with pain of my tooth and they say qe fully booked at 8 am. Waiting for 1 hour over the phone. They don't help. Discussing also I got an infection plus my nerve is out, and they can't help why they say is an emergency when is not. Wait over the phone from 8 am till 9:30 and then they say is fully booked what a joke
Núria Teixeira
The GP and 111 gave me the number and I’ve been calling since 18th of August and still can’t get an appointment. I’ve been in severe pain from my teeth that it’s spreading to my ear and head, all I hear is “we’ve put your number on the priority list as we’re fully booked” and still can’t get a message or call back. Completely unacceptable
steve king
Excellent from phoning to getting an appointment all staff very polite.had a bad wisdom tooth needed to be taken out was in andout within 25 mins the dentist and her assistant was brilliant the waiting room and the dentist room were very clean and tidy would highly recommend thank you 😊
Sam Brader
I can’t understand the bad reviews I've used this service twice in 10 years both times i have got an appointment for the same day, caring kind people on the phone & the staff & dentists in the place are polite, helpful & kind, Thank you so much for your help & service
Maksim K
It is with profound disappointment and a sense of betrayal that I write this review regarding the current state of NHS dental services in the UK. My recent experience attempting to access emergency dental care for a severely painful tooth has laid bare a system that is, frankly, broken and failing its citizens. Like countless others, I contribute significantly through my taxes, with the understanding that these funds are meant to support essential public services, including healthcare. Yet, when faced with a basic human need – the urgent removal of a painful tooth – the NHS dental system feels less like a service and more like a cruel lottery. The ordeal began with an excruciating wait of over 1.5 hours on the phone, only to be met with a sympathetic voice informing me that all appointments were fully booked, and I should "call again Monday." This isn't an isolated incident; it's a recurring nightmare for many. The sheer impossibility of securing a timely appointment for acute pain is not only distressing but medically concerning. The alternative presented is often the private sector, which, while offering quicker access, comes at a prohibitive cost. To be quoted £350 simply to extract a painful tooth, a procedure that should be readily accessible and affordable through a publicly funded system, is an insult to the taxpayer and a stark reminder of the widening chasm between public expectation and grim reality. The argument that our taxes are increasing year on year while essential services like NHS dentistry become increasingly inaccessible is a valid and infuriating one. It begs the question: where are these funds truly going if not to bolster the very foundations of our well-being? This isn't just about inconvenience; it's about basic human dignity and the right to relief from suffering. The current dental crisis within the NHS is a testament to systemic underfunding, a severe shortage of practitioners willing to take on NHS contracts due to unattractive terms, and a lack of coherent long-term planning. I genuinely fear for future generations who will inherit a healthcare system where fundamental needs are treated as luxuries. The current model is unsustainable, delusional, and demonstrably failing to provide basic dental care. Urgent, radical reform is not just desirable; it is absolutely essential to restore faith in a system that many now view with bitter cynicism.
Dan L
Cracked my wisdom tooth and was in severe agony for days. Rang at 8am got an appointment easy enough. Not a big fan of dentists or needles but the nurses that dealt with me were amazing. Genuinely nice people and helped make me feel very relaxed.
Ehor
Peterborough Dental Access Centre
Dental clinic
James Mold
Absolutely fantastic today. Sarah and Lydia worked together seamlessly even though I would not let Sarah’s hand leave me, I have severe anxiety when it comes to dentistry work but they made me feel a lot better and eventually I agreed to have my tooth removed. Lots of numbing, slight pressure but didn’t even feel the tooth leaving the socket! Was a tooth that really needed to come out. Thank you both of you so much 🙏🏻 ready for a pain free Christmas 🎅
Lina Maz
Kerrie Drew
I called at 8am last Monday and in 8 minutes I was off the phone with an appointment for 10.30am. I had a wisdom tooth that needed to come out, I was given 1 weeks antibiotics and appointment for 8am today to have it removed. Went back at 8am today, my tooth was out by 8.30. All the staff were lovely from booking the appointment to the dentist herself. Would highly recommend if you’re ever in an emergency
Nana Nana
The worse place. One week I call with pain of my tooth and they say qe fully booked at 8 am. Waiting for 1 hour over the phone. They don't help. Discussing also I got an infection plus my nerve is out, and they can't help why they say is an emergency when is not. Wait over the phone from 8 am till 9:30 and then they say is fully booked what a joke
Núria Teixeira
The GP and 111 gave me the number and I’ve been calling since 18th of August and still can’t get an appointment. I’ve been in severe pain from my teeth that it’s spreading to my ear and head, all I hear is “we’ve put your number on the priority list as we’re fully booked” and still can’t get a message or call back. Completely unacceptable
steve king
Excellent from phoning to getting an appointment all staff very polite.had a bad wisdom tooth needed to be taken out was in andout within 25 mins the dentist and her assistant was brilliant the waiting room and the dentist room were very clean and tidy would highly recommend thank you 😊
Sam Brader
I can’t understand the bad reviews I've used this service twice in 10 years both times i have got an appointment for the same day, caring kind people on the phone & the staff & dentists in the place are polite, helpful & kind, Thank you so much for your help & service
Maksim K
It is with profound disappointment and a sense of betrayal that I write this review regarding the current state of NHS dental services in the UK. My recent experience attempting to access emergency dental care for a severely painful tooth has laid bare a system that is, frankly, broken and failing its citizens. Like countless others, I contribute significantly through my taxes, with the understanding that these funds are meant to support essential public services, including healthcare. Yet, when faced with a basic human need – the urgent removal of a painful tooth – the NHS dental system feels less like a service and more like a cruel lottery. The ordeal began with an excruciating wait of over 1.5 hours on the phone, only to be met with a sympathetic voice informing me that all appointments were fully booked, and I should "call again Monday." This isn't an isolated incident; it's a recurring nightmare for many. The sheer impossibility of securing a timely appointment for acute pain is not only distressing but medically concerning. The alternative presented is often the private sector, which, while offering quicker access, comes at a prohibitive cost. To be quoted £350 simply to extract a painful tooth, a procedure that should be readily accessible and affordable through a publicly funded system, is an insult to the taxpayer and a stark reminder of the widening chasm between public expectation and grim reality. The argument that our taxes are increasing year on year while essential services like NHS dentistry become increasingly inaccessible is a valid and infuriating one. It begs the question: where are these funds truly going if not to bolster the very foundations of our well-being? This isn't just about inconvenience; it's about basic human dignity and the right to relief from suffering. The current dental crisis within the NHS is a testament to systemic underfunding, a severe shortage of practitioners willing to take on NHS contracts due to unattractive terms, and a lack of coherent long-term planning. I genuinely fear for future generations who will inherit a healthcare system where fundamental needs are treated as luxuries. The current model is unsustainable, delusional, and demonstrably failing to provide basic dental care. Urgent, radical reform is not just desirable; it is absolutely essential to restore faith in a system that many now view with bitter cynicism.
Dan L
Cracked my wisdom tooth and was in severe agony for days. Rang at 8am got an appointment easy enough. Not a big fan of dentists or needles but the nurses that dealt with me were amazing. Genuinely nice people and helped make me feel very relaxed.
Ehor
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