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Dental professionals’ working patterns data

On this page, we provide a summary of the working patterns questions that the GDC included as part of the dentists' annual renewal in December 2023, and the DCP annual renewal in July 2024.

The survey was voluntary and 24,928 dentists (55% of the dentist register) and 43,692 (58% of the DCP register) answered the working patterns questions. For DCPs, this represented 54,600 (64%) of the total number of DCP registered titles.

The data can be viewed at a national and individual country level, and the DCP data can be viewed as a DCP total or by individual professional title.     

Updated: Mon, 01 Jul 2024

Dentist-Work-Pattern-Data (July 2024)

Updated: Thu, 31 Oct 2024

DCP working patterns data (October 2024)

Updated: Thu, 31 Oct 2024

GDC working patterns data dentists and DCP summary - October 2024

Interpreting the data

Further analysis of the dentist data is planned for later in 2024. The following notes will help with interpretation of the summary data tables.  

Key categories reported

The data is reported by the following sub-categories:

  • Clinical
  • Non-clinical
  • Mixed clinical/Non-clinical
  • NHS
  • Private
  • Mix of NHS and private.

Each category is derived from a working pattern question only. It is not cross referenced with any external definition. Further detail can be found on the Definitions page in the summary table file. These categories have been self-selected by the respondents. The GDC has not recoded or validated the data. 

Missing values

Respondents had the opportunity to skip the question or to select ‘Prefer not to say'.

Registrants working in dentistry

We have only included respondents who answered for question 1 'Are you currently working in the dental sector?' either 'Yes' or 'No, but seeking work in the dental sector'.

Duplicates

In the latest round of reporting, only those with an active dentist or DCP registration were counted. There is only one response per registration. The only instance in this data collection where someone would fill out more than one set of questions is if they have registration both as a DCP and as a dentist.

Multi-code questions

Multi-code questions can be identified by the question instruction 'Select all that apply'. The totals are calculated by the number of responses, not the number of respondents. This means that totals for these questions will be greater than the number of people who completed the question. This is indicated in the data tables.

Location data

Counts for each country are based upon the number of registrants who stated they worked in that country (not postcode data).  Where multiple locations of work are selected for the question: 'As a dental professional, where do you work? (Select all that apply)' the registrant has been included in counts for all the locations – this is labelled in the data tables. Where registrants have selected ‘Prefer not to say’ for country location in UK, they have been removed from the nation breakdowns.

UK registrants working outside the UK

In the summary tables the data for those working 'Outside of the UK' are for those who are only working outside the UK. These people have GDC registration that allows them to practice in the UK but are currently only working abroad.

Employment postcode

Postcode district level data (eg PO23 xxx) was collected, not full postcode data. This field could also be left blank. This data has been aggregated to counts for postcode area for two questions, which relate to whether the respondent works in a clinical or non-clinical role, and whether the respondent provides NHS or private care.

For these questions, the postcode area name is an administrative centre. The count will include all postcode areas beginning with the first two letters, not just those in the administrative centre. Responding dental professionals who did not provide a valid postcode district or selected ‘prefer not to say’ are excluded from these counts.

How we developed the questions

The questions provide data on whether registrants are employed in the dental sector, how they are working, how many hours and in which setting and sector they are working, and where they are working.

We looked at existing information on collecting working patterns data including sources from the NHS, the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Government Statistical Service (GSS) and the Institute for Social and Economic Research.

We combined this with questions previously developed for our research and tested with dental professionals.

In order to minimise the burden on respondents, we used fixed response options to capture factual data about working patterns. It took most respondents five minutes or less to complete the survey.