Mike Solomons
Member
- Messages
- 24
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
Do you release that most GPs services are run by private companies and have been since the NHS started...... Therefore why do you object to private compaines running NHS services?
You are deliberately missing the point.
You did NOT take your wife to a full diabetic eye check appointment.
You took your wife to a specialist eye screening service which was looking for one thing and one thing only - diabetic retinopathy.
There are a number of specialised services which go out into the community and test for only one thing, including glaucoma and breast cancer. As far as I know none of them test for any other conditions. This is the way the services have been designed and the way that they have been implemented.
If your wife has known sight problems then she should be under the care of a local optometrist or a specialist eye clinic which is intended to diagnose and treat her eye conditions.
It just so happens that I have the standard brochure in front of me now, as I am due my annual eye screening in early January.
This includes the words "Screening does not look for other eye conditions and you should continue to visit your optician regularly for an eye examination as well.". This seems pretty clear to me.
The brochure says that you get drops in your eyes, photographs taken of the back of your eyes, results about 6 weeks later. So it seems clear from the brochure that ALL you are getting is photographs of the back of your eyes.
I am assuming that you are making sure that your wife has comprehensive eye care from a suitably trained specialist.
Meanwhile, ranting about a service not delivering things which it was never intended to deliver seems remarkably unproductive.
I do note that the accompanying letter from my local NHS on behalf of the eye screening service (not the standard brochure which should go out with all the eye screening test appointments) it very woolly and vague.
My copy says "The aim of eye screening is to detect any changes caused by diabetes that could cause damage to your sight." It also says "Helps to detect any risk to your vision caused by diabetes."
These statements are vague and potentially misleading, and I will raise them with my local NHS and Diabetes UK.
I was involved in the design of the brochure in conjunction with Diabetes UK so I will try and track back and see if there is anyone still around who can take up the issue.
However it is very clear that the service your wife attended is not a scam and you should perhaps be a little more cautious in the ways you go about defaming a legitimate service provider providing a legitimate service.
If you had any other problem then I am sure you would have symptoms of it and then would see an optician or your GP about it
You presumably get seen by a specialist eye clinic because you have a diagnosed eye condition ( not retinopathy?) requiring specialist intervention and monitoring. Your wife is attending a screening service because she is at risk of diabetic retinopathy which is all they are screening for. An optician / optometrist or your wifes GP is the first point of call for other eye health conditions - they are the gatekeepers for and accepted referral routes to specialist eye care services
Hmmmmm .... well given that you yourself sayRubbish, I was checked by a competent eye specialist doctor linked to the hospital diabetes clinic from diagnosis and have never previously come across this, in my view, blatant scam.
Hmmmmm .... well given that you yourself say
“Ihave eye difficulties that are closely monitored by an outreach clinic run by Moorfields “and
“I am suffering from a number of slowly developing conditions that are being monitored. If any go beyond what is consideredsafe, I may need very urgent intervention”
the phrase “ if you’re in a hole just stop digging”, comes to mind.
On my last screening I was advised to make an appointment for a regular eye test. My opticians screening system is linked by computer to the diabetes department and clinic at a local hospital where the photographic results are examined and from where I receive my results letter.
I'm OK with that .
I have both retinal screening via the national screening service and a more detailed eye exam which I pay for privately via my optometrist both concur that my eyes are fine. I would respectfully suggest that making wild assumptions / claims about other peoples health conditions is both inappropriate and foolish, however much you want / need to manafacture ‘facts’ to suppourt your position????? I suggest that's advice you should take.
I have been properly monitored since 1985. Over the years, competent monitoring by specialist doctors has found certain problems and they have acted accordingly. If I had only seen a high street optician and the service about which I have complained, I suspect I'd have been totally happy until going blind.
The public being told that diabetic retinopathy is being checked would be unlikely to realise that there are many other eye problems that can be linked to diabetes which the "service" does not check for. By thus, in some cases, creating a false illusion of there being nothing wrong, this limited low standard service is, in my view, extremely dangerous.
Regarding your own condition, you made a very big mistake. Diabetic retinopathy doesn't go away. It may have reduced but as far as I understand it, the advice you describe is just plain wrong. I strongly advise you to have occasional eye clinic checks before it's too late.
If you had any other problem then I am sure you would have symptoms of it and then would see an optician or your GP about it
I have not, as you claimed, defamed "a legitimate service provider providing a legitimate service". I have drawn attention to what I feel is a 3rd world standard screening service that creates the illusion of checking for problems that can arise from diabetes.
I stick by what I have said, it should be fully investigated and either revised to offer a useful service or be closed down.
I do note that you have a vested interest. If I were you, I'd hide away.
I was sent for a retinopathy scan. Chart, drops photos. Came back clear BUT I was not advised to visit anyone else to check whether there were other problems. Maybe it's my own stupidity that I didn't go elsewhere, but maybe it should be included in standard advice to new diabetics.
I don't think a normal eye test gives a return on investment high enough to get past NICE. Remember whenever the NHS spends money on one thing, they have to stop sending the money on something else.
You might like to read the various government documents which explain how the diabetic eye screening programme is run. I think you'll find that the procedures used in NW London are quite normal for screening. https://www.gov.uk/topic/population-screening-programmes/diabetic-eyeRubbish, I was checked by a competent eye specialist doctor linked to the hospital diabetes clinic from diagnosis and have never previously come across this, in my view, blatant scam.
SpecSavers, for one, are usually happy to do on demand eye testing and they have plenty of electronic gizmos to measure your eyesight. They also take retinal photographs.
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