You can get a cheap pair of sunglasses (e.g. from a charity shop) that are large enough to slip over your normal glasses. Most people won't notice you're wearing 2 pairs. A hat with a brim can also be useful. On the other hand, it may be dull and raining and brightness won't be a problem. It's not unusual to be a little apprehensive before your first screening but most people come away from the appointment wondering what they had been worried about.I am due to have my first test on 30 June. My problem is a little different in that I have quite poor eyesight and wear specs, I do not own a pair of prescription sunglasses so I fear that I will be blind after the test until I get home. I will have a large son with me but I have to admit I'm inches away from cancelling the appointment because the close it gets the more anxious I am becoming.
I am due to have my first test on 30 June. My problem is a little different in that I have quite poor eyesight and wear specs, I do not own a pair of prescription sunglasses so I fear that I will be blind after the test until I get home. I will have a large son with me but I have to admit I'm inches away from cancelling the appointment because the close it gets the more anxious I am becoming.
In the UK it is illegal to drive after the drops have been put in. Operating machinery may not be a good idea. The light off my computer screen hurt so much I couldn't look at it. 4 hours later things improved. Back to normal after 5 hours.
Really? What law is that? I can see insurers not coughing up at the slightest excuse, but there is a subsection of an an Act of Parliament or statutory instrument to actually make it illegal?
I have my first on Monday. on my letter it says I cannot drive and my vision will be blurry for upto 4 hours after. Is this the case as i'm due to go into work after my appointment?
You must be able to read (with glasses or contact lenses, if necessary) a car number plate made after 1 September 2001 from 20 metres.Dilation can affect the visual acuity (which is why the screeners do the test with the eye chart BEFORE they take photos). For some people this may be enough to reduce their visual acuity to below the minimum visual acuity of 6/12.
You must also meet the minimum eyesight standard for driving by having a visual acuity of at least decimal 0.5 (6/12) measured on the Snellen scale(with glasses or contact lenses, if necessary) using both eyes together or, if you have sight in one eye only, in that eye.
https://www.gov.uk/driving-eyesight-rules
Personally I wouldn't risk it. It would just be my luck that some idiot would drive into me on the way home.Thanks for clarifying. While this government site represents the minimum requirement in terms of what one is expected to be able to make out, it still does not cite the actual legislation for our perusal. The only UK legislation I can find which makes it illegal to drive if vision has not been corrected to meet said condition is the Road Traffic Act 1988, section 96, subsection 1. Sorry to be dull and tedious, but I picked it up during a law degree (which was very dull and tedious). My point is, that while your own comment is informative, the original post by @keitjones, stating that "it is illegal to drive after the drops have been put in", is a bit misleading (accidentally of course), and, unless I am missing something, no current or past legislation actually states that. By all means, don't take the chance if you are less than confident that your eyesight is affected to the extent that you would fall short of the criteria mentioned, but - otherwise - I "see" no legal reason not to drive purely based on the fact that you have had these drops put in. Insurance companies would also be required to stipulate in policy documentation that such drops or a doctor's advice not to drive would render the policy invalid to avoid paying out. Anyway, my eyes are fine after five minutes, so I will be driving home.
Personally I wouldn't risk it. It would just be my luck that some idiot would drive into me on the way home.
The attached document is very useful especially the last paragraph.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?