Lottie18
Newbie
- Messages
- 4
- Location
- Bedfordshire
- Type of diabetes
- Type 1
- Treatment type
- Insulin
- Dislikes
- Rude people
You need a letter from your local health care for diabetes eye check. Its free as you're type 1. Both specsavers amnd boots do it but without the regular choose and book you probably get charged. It is a free service that is done every year. Maybe your nurse misunderstood you and thought you wanted a regular eye test instead of retinal photography. Ring them or explain next appointment. It for testing if you have retinopathy.Hi all. Newly diagnosed T1D here, about a month ago, with a HbA1c of 124 on diagnosis. Clearly had been diabetic for months without realising. I have had most of the required health checks done to ensure I did not do any damage with such a high HbA1C for god knows how long. The last think to check are my eyes. I mentioned getting an appointment to my DSN yesterday and she said I could just arrange it with any of the local opticians boots, specsavers etc... is that accurate? I was under the impression it had to be organised through the NHS and done in specialised NHS locations?
Thanks for your help in advance!
Ian
Welcome to the club! I was diagnosed last year with hba1c of over 130. No history in the family, just a little concerned as to why my weight was dropping and I was exhausted all the time. Had blamed the thirst on the hot weather we were having....Thanks for all the replies! Checked with my GP surgery. Apparently newly diagnosed patients are automatically added to a register for the retinal screening and I should get a letter soon. So I will wait and see for now.
In the meantime I will also go to local opticians for a regular eye check up and test as I am well overdue a test and a pair of new glasses.
Boots etc all do the Retinal Screening, at least here in Scotland they do, as do most other opticians.Hi all. Newly diagnosed T1D here, about a month ago, with a HbA1c of 124 on diagnosis. Clearly had been diabetic for months without realising. I have had most of the required health checks done to ensure I did not do any damage with such a high HbA1C for god knows how long. The last think to check are my eyes. I mentioned getting an appointment to my DSN yesterday and she said I could just arrange it with any of the local opticians boots, specsavers etc... is that accurate? I was under the impression it had to be organised through the NHS and done in specialised NHS locations?
Thanks for your help in advance!
Ian
I think most optometrists would be a bit annoyed if you said they weren't professionals! This is not being fobbed off. Optometrists are perfectly able to check the back of the eye!No,no,no,don't be fobbed off by the DN,the HA have a duty of care,not Specsavers,the retinopathy screening must be carried out by them,in order that regular screening and examination is made by a professional .
Optometrists are professionals but they are not qualified to undertake retinopathy screening unless they have obtained specific extra qualifications in diabetic eye screening, and are working under the auspices of their local eye screening programme. In some areas of the country there are no optometrists employed by the local diabetic eye screening programme so patients should not be referred to them by their GP practice.I think most optometrists would be a bit annoyed if you said they weren't professionals! This is not being fobbed off. Optometrists are perfectly able to check the back of the eye!
I think most optometrists would be a bit annoyed if you said they weren't professionals! This is not being fobbed off. Optometrists are perfectly able to check the back of the eye!
At my last screening the technician told me that normal optometrist shops do not have the advanced machinery needed for an accurate assessment, do not enhance the images fully, and do not have 2 specialists looking at them, also do not have previous images to compare with. Most do not use the drops either, which she said were important and always done unless there were special circumstances, such as previous bad reactions.
Optometrists are professionals but they are not qualified to undertake retinopathy screening unless they have obtained specific extra qualifications in diabetic eye screening, and are working under the auspices of their local eye screening programme. In some areas of the country there are no optometrists employed by the local diabetic eye screening programme so patients should not be referred to them by their GP practice.
Are we talking the photo screening or the actual scan done of the back of the eye? It's my understanding that this is not offered to everyone, but you can get one free with a good bout of diabetic maculopathy! And never done with any drops...
was talking the normal photo screening that all diabetics are supposed to have annually.
Yes, Scotland differs in some aspects - e.g. only 1 photo per eye instead of 2. The screening location varies according to the health board:-Obviously this is different in Scotland, since only once in my 18 years of being diabetic, have I had this done in Hospital. Most of the time it is done here by a local optometrist and forwarded to the local hospital for evaluation. I haven't had to have it done recently, since I am now under the care of and Ophthalmic Consultant due to diabetic maculopathy, I now regularly undergo OCT scans. As i8ve said in response to another poster, not all Health Trusts adhere to NICE guidelines.....they are only guidelines, after all......
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