A furious former miner says he has been forced to eat a diet of prescription painkillers and soup as he can’t afford £5,400 for private dental treatment.
David Creamer, 62, has been left in “agony” for more than seven months while waiting for NHS treatment to fix a set of four crowns that snapped off his top jaw.
But despite visiting emergency dental clinics, his GP and contacting numerous surgeries, he still hasn't found a practice that will take him on.
David joked how he now wished he'd ‘trained as a dentist’ after recently being given the eye-watering quote for treatment at a private clinic.
And he blames the Conservative government for ‘destroying’ the crucial health service and leaving him in constant pain.
The fed-up former pitman said: “I don’t see any light at the end of the tunnel.
“I’m absolutely shocked – a country like this. I hear on the news we’re one of the top six richest countries in the world.
“Well, we might be if you’ve got a very, very large bank account and you vote Conservative, that appears to be the gist of things.
“I never used to have a problem before with dentists. I never had a problem all my life until this happened.
“It’s bad enough getting a doctor’s appointment around here – it takes two weeks to get that. As for dentists, I think it’s a dying art.
"It's fine if you’ve got money, if you haven’t, you just won’t see one. It’s definitely a two-tier system. You’re on your own.”
David, who worked for 17 years at Silverwood Colliery, near Ravenfield, South Yorks., said his set of crowns had snapped off his top jaw in Blackpool in June last year.
He had just tucked into a sandwich while on holiday in the seaside destination when he felt a sharp pain in his gums as the four enamel tooth coverings came away.
David had headed to an emergency dentist for vulnerable residents in Blackpool but said that the centre was “chock-a-block full of people” and he couldn’t be seen.
He visited his GP when he returned to his home town of Rotherham, South Yorks.
And he was then prescribed with high strength Co-codamol painkillers, which he now takes every four hours, as well as Naproxen to reduce his swelling.
David also went to a local emergency dentist, who told him he’d need some roots taken out and several of his teeth had shattered - but said they couldn't treat him.
And seven months later, he is still struggling to find an NHS practitioner who will perform the much-needed surgery to put him out of his misery.
He said: “Here we are, end of January nearly, and I’m still here, on these tablets every day, in constant pain.
“I’m living on soup and rice puddings as that’s all I can eat. I can’t chew anything.
“If the pain would go away, I don’t mind walking around looking like a hobbit with no teeth. But it’s the pain – if somebody can just do something about it."
He added: “People are pulling their own teeth out with plyers or whatever.