I broke the side off a molar the first week into lock down.
The Dentist's surgery was closed, but the Dentist's practice had put up an email address for emergency enquiries.
I contacted them and asked, and was advised that I could buy and use the two part 'filler', and that it wouldn't cause problems when I could actually get an appointment.
Well, the tooth was duly covered, and seemed stable, but during the next lock down it eventually it developed into aching pain in the jaw
So, back on to the Dentist, and was told that they were running a very, very scant emergency service, and that if I was prepared to follow all guidelines then yes, they'd have a look at it....but it could only be done privately because the NHS wouldn't cover them for the reality of totally suiting up and totally sterilising the room, etc.,
I happily paid. The root canal treatment was done and it worked
I am an NHS baby, and the NHS is a godsend, it is one of those truly good things that we don't appreciate enough.
That I could afford to do this is I know contentious, because so many can't, but I could, and I did, and I was incredibly grateful that my Dentist was prepared to organise this, because they are very much NHS dentists, but their reality is that they too have bills to pay, and staff to support, etc., etc.,
Hospitals were prepared to offer emergency dental appointments, but they were doing extractions rather than the time consuming and laborious processes of dealing with infected roots, stablising them, letting those heal and then fitting crowns.
Hard times, hard decisions.
Honestly ? from my age I wish we grew three sets of teeth, I really do, because so many of us would just simply know better and take better care than we did.
My children have no fillings, no crowns, no gaps.....because we knew better, and they were healthy.
That ought to be normal. We know it's not, there are many reasons for tooth damage, but I think that's the aim.
Teach your children to take better care than older generations did.
The NHS now only pays for an annual check up, I don't think that's enough, and my Dentist agrees. So, I pay privately for the one in the middle, just to keep on top of things.
It's not expensive, about the cost of a meal out. ....to be able to eat happily for the rest of the year, to catch anything unbenign in good time, it's worth it to me.
In an ideal world the work the Dentists do (and really, they are specialist Doctors) would be properly funded by the NHS. I'd like to see that, I really would, because decent teeth, decent oral care, are a fundamental thing to good health.
Anyway, my recommendation is the book that
@TeeDee mentioned, 'Where there is no Dentist', do the regular dental check ups, and keep the toothy peg things to hand in the first aid kit when away from home.