Well, after 15 months of what was intended as a permanent move to the UK, my wife and two kids and I are moving back to the States. We go back to Seattle mid-December.
I had transferred with my employer to the UK office (Guildford, Surrey), while my wife quit her dentist job in America with the expectation of working as a dentist here. When we moved, the rules were that for non-EU qualified dentists, they need to take the IQE Part A, B, and C exams to be registered with the General Dental Council (GDC) as qualified dentists (EU dentists, just show up). While this in itself is unfair (preferring rather questionable dental qualification from some European states compared to someone with years of clinical experience in the US), we accepted that as a political requirement on the UK as an EU member.
My wife passed IQE Part A in June (£650 fee by the way), and was preparing for Part B (another £650) when the GDC announced that all registrations of non-EU dentists is now frozen "until further notice". In other words, even if you pass all 3 exams (taking around 18 months and a couple of thousand pounds), there is no assurance you will be registered!
See
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6177330.stm [nofollow] for a good writeup.
After a year of trying everything we could to work within the system, my wife feels the goal post has been moved in the middle of the game. And in a somewhat American way, we have decided enough is enough and we won't accept this way of doing things. So off we go.
What I do hope is that in the future the GDC will reconsider its stance, and allow some "common sense" treatment of foreign qualifications (e.g. case by case, where you make a distinction between degree/experience from different countries, for God's sake). When this happens, we will reconsider our decision, because all things being equal, we want to live in the UK for all the wonderful reasons (Yes, BBC4 is a big one) that you have come to appreciate by living here.
One trait the British will have to change soon is to be too reserved and too patient in the face of bureaucracy and lack of common sense. I hear everyone here complain (quietly, of course) about the shortage of dentists, but they all fall in line behind a completely misguided application of EU politics to their own dental care.
Thanks for hearing me out.