Equal access to eyecare should be available to all South Devon people, including those in care homes.
This is the message from Specsavers Home Visits team in South Devon during National Eye Health Week (18-24 September), with many care home residents expected have some form of vision loss within the next 10 years.
While regular eye tests are essential for everyone, they are especially important for people living in care homes, as they are five times more likely to experience sight loss, contributing to social isolation and reduced independence.
Dawn Roberts, Specsavers Home Visits clinical director, says: ‘Maintaining good vision is a key part of any person’s quality of life, but perhaps more so for care home residents because they often have limited mobility, so most of their hobbies and pastimes will involve visual tasks.
‘Sight loss can be very isolating and, for those already struggling with memory problems or dementia, any confusion and disorientation is exacerbated by impaired vision. This can lead to a loss of engagement in social activities and sometimes increased risk of falls. Providing regular eye care can minimise or even eliminate these issues for people living in care homes allowing them to enjoy doing the things they want to do.
‘Specsavers is proud to offer home visits to anybody unable to leave their home, including residents of care homes.’
Almost a quarter of a million people living in UK care homes could unknowingly have an eye condition, which could lead to permanent sight loss if not spotted and treated in time.
Of the 2.7 million people in the UK who would benefit from domiciliary eye care, only 460,000 eye tests were recorded between 2019 and 2020.
However, due to complex medical needs, such as dementia, reduced mobility and hearing loss, many care home residents are unable to access high street opticians, communicate their eye care needs, or easily access home visit services.
A government requirement to submit a pre-visit notification before carrying out an eye test for those who can’t leave their home unaccompanied, including those in care homes, is also being called for by Specsavers as an unnecessary administrative step which is further thwarting access to eye care.
Currently, optometrists are required to notify the NHS at least 48 hours before making a visit to one or two customers, and three weeks before seeing three or more customers at the same address. Specsavers is calling for the removal of this pre-visit notification and will be highlighting this discriminatory barrier to MPs and the need for a consistent approach to eye care for everyone throughout England.
Specsavers Home Visits, which is celebrating its 10-year anniversary, carries out the same standard of eye test in people’s homes that is found in Specsavers’ stores, but with just with a few changes and specialist equipment to make them home friendly.
In the past year alone, the team of mobile opticians has dispensed more than a quarter of a million glasses to those who can’t leave their homes unaccompanied, and referred more than 16,000 for treatment to safeguard their sight. They have also visited nearly 16,000 people in residential care in the country.
Regular eye tests are not only important in identifying changes in vision and detecting the early signs of multiple eye conditions, but also because sight loss can have a significant impact on the overall safety and wellbeing of a person, particularly if they are older. The rate of falls in older people with sight loss increase by 1.7 times, the medical cost of falls directly related to having sight loss is £128m.
Specsavers provides Dementia Friends training, as part of an initiative run by the Alzheimer’s Society, to help support the needs of people living with dementia.
To book a home eye test, visit specsavers.co.uk/home-eye-tests.
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