User talk:81.107.131.171: Difference between revisions
m Signing comment by 194.42.240.60 - "→UK Dental conspiracy comments: new section" |
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As above, you need reliable sources to add any content to Wikipedia |
As above, you need reliable sources to add any content to Wikipedia |
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To comment, I would point out that composite fillings done 100% ''correctly'' risk fracture of teeth because of the polymerization contraction that occurs during setting of the material. The material is bonded to the walls of the cavity, and it shrinks slightly, which draws the parts of the tooth around the filling together, which may lead to a crack appearing. |
To comment, I would point out that composite fillings done 100% ''correctly'' risk fracture of teeth because of the polymerization contraction that occurs during setting of the material. The material is bonded to the walls of the cavity, and it shrinks slightly, which draws the parts of the tooth around the filling together, which may lead to a crack appearing. |
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Also, even if UK dentists are carrying out dental work which is below "international standard",(compared to what exactly, Somalia?) which I don't think anyone is likely to accept without a very reliable source, the fault does not lie with dentists but with the NHS, whose system forces NHS dentists to work incredibly fast in order to make ends meet. The perceived ultra-high income available in UK dentistry is largely a myth. |
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The underlying problem is that the NHS is (or was) essentially an example of socialized medicine, which cannot exist within a capitalist environment. Socialized medicine says "free healthcare for all at the point of delivery", but capitalism says "individuals are only worth to society what they can pay" and makes patients into customers. Recession has lead to much privatization by the back door, which is now why NHS patients contribute towards the cost of dental treatment, prescriptions, etc out of their own pocket. |
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<span style="font-size: smaller;" class="autosigned">— Preceding [[Wikipedia:Signatures|unsigned]] comment added by [[Special:Contributions/194.42.240.60|194.42.240.60]] ([[User talk:194.42.240.60|talk]]) 19:17, 22 June 2014 (UTC)</span><!-- Template:Unsigned IP --> <!--Autosigned by SineBot--> |
Revision as of 19:24, 22 June 2014
Greetings, and thanks for your contributions to Wikipedia. I just reverted your edit, because you did not provide any reliable sources for your change. If you find such a source, you are welcome to reinstate it.If you think I made a mistake, or if you have any questions, please feel free to contact me. Regards, Vanamonde93 (talk) 17:06, 22 June 2014 (UTC)
UK Dental conspiracy comments
As above, you need reliable sources to add any content to Wikipedia
To comment, I would point out that composite fillings done 100% correctly risk fracture of teeth because of the polymerization contraction that occurs during setting of the material. The material is bonded to the walls of the cavity, and it shrinks slightly, which draws the parts of the tooth around the filling together, which may lead to a crack appearing.
Also, even if UK dentists are carrying out dental work which is below "international standard",(compared to what exactly, Somalia?) which I don't think anyone is likely to accept without a very reliable source, the fault does not lie with dentists but with the NHS, whose system forces NHS dentists to work incredibly fast in order to make ends meet. The perceived ultra-high income available in UK dentistry is largely a myth.
The underlying problem is that the NHS is (or was) essentially an example of socialized medicine, which cannot exist within a capitalist environment. Socialized medicine says "free healthcare for all at the point of delivery", but capitalism says "individuals are only worth to society what they can pay" and makes patients into customers. Recession has lead to much privatization by the back door, which is now why NHS patients contribute towards the cost of dental treatment, prescriptions, etc out of their own pocket.
— Preceding unsigned comment added by 194.42.240.60 (talk) 19:17, 22 June 2014 (UTC)