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A dentist looking at a patient’s teeth.
At least one face-to-face annual dental check will be offered as a minimum, with health advice and prevention visits also on offer. Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA
At least one face-to-face annual dental check will be offered as a minimum, with health advice and prevention visits also on offer. Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA

Residential school students in England to get free dental, eyesight and hearing checks

NHS checks are expected to reach about 18,000 students with disabilities and additional needs

Young people with disabilities and additional needs in residential schools and colleges will soon be offered free NHS hearing, dental and eyesight checks.

NHS sensory checks that were piloted by the government in 2022 and 2023 will be rolled out to educational facilities across England from next year.

Autistic children and those with learning disabilities are more likely to experience hearing, eyesight and dental problems than their peers.

The programme is expected to reach about 18,000 students.

Tom Cahill, the national learning disability and autism director at NHS England, said the new checks would ensure any issues were identified promptly.

“Mainstream services can sometimes struggle to meet the needs of autistic children and young people, or those with a profound learning disability, so these new sensory checks in residential special schools will provide the support they need,” he said.

“Having specialist services which take account of an individual’s reasonable adjustments, with support from people that know them well and delivered by appropriately trained staff, will help ensure that they are able to access sensory checks that other children and young people routinely receive.”

Eyesight checks will be carried out annually and at least one face-to-face annual dental check will be offered as a minimum, with health advice and prevention visits also on offer.

The minister of state for care, Stephen Kinnock, said the checkups would help tackle health inequality and give access to support faster.

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“I am pleased we will be able to support vital sensory checks for all pupils in special educational settings, in a comfortable and known environment for them,” he said.

“These checks will enable health issues in around 18,000 children and young people to be identified more promptly.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • ‘Incredibly disheartening’ decline in special needs pupil attainment in England

  • Record 576,000 pupils have special needs support plan in England

  • School leaders warn of ‘full-blown’ special needs crisis in England

  • One in three teachers have no behaviour support for pupils with additional needs, poll finds

  • UK’s black children ‘face cultural barriers’ in accessing help for autism and ADHD

  • Special educational needs in English schools in ‘crisis’, minister admits

  • Hard-up English councils ration access to special needs tests

  • Catholic and C of E primary schools in England ‘take fewer Send pupils’

  • ‘Funding black hole’: councils grapple with ‘catastrophic’ debt for SEN children

  • The Guardian view on Tory plans for Send cuts: the wrong move

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