I am diabetic type 2. My mother was diabetic type 2 and lost her sight because of it, so I think eye tests are important. (He knew that my mother had lost her sight through diabetes)
It seems to have changed a few years ago: https://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/eye-tests.125641/I read on this forum that recalls had changed to every 2 years
you should be getting sufficient diabetic eye screening tests to keep your eyes safe from diabetic caused blindness (assuming your regular tests haven't been cancelled).
I'm abit confused by this, because I have attended all of my eye screening appointments and I'm having/have had vision issues. Do they just wait for something to actually happen before they act (like vision loss)? I thought it was all about preventing vision loss?
I go for diabetic retinopathy eye testing ONCE A YEAR. It takes place at my local hospital. As for the opticians I have a free eye test ONCE A YEAR. I have glaucoma and take drops to keep eye pressure in check. The hospital eye testing is totally different to optician eye test. Local optician is to keep check of your vision reading glasses etc; and the other is to check there is no problems behind your eye and that is why they take a photos of your eyes.Hi. I went to the opticians today, last eye test was Feb 2021. I had several reminders over the last few months, but put it off as I was dealing with other issues (family ill & in hospital etc).
When I went into to see the optician, he asked the normal “how do you think your vision is, are you having problems”. I said I thought me reading vision had, as I was now struggling at work reading paperwork etc. He then looked at my notes and asked if there was a special reason I was down as a yearly recall. I said that I was diabetic. He asked if I go for retinopathy screening, and when I said yes, he said that I only needed to go to the opticians every 2 years??? I then mentioned that I use computers at work all day and that I thought you were supposed to go every year for that reason anyway. He replied “not really”???
Is this more NHS cutbacks?? Has something changed? Does anyone know how often you are supposed to / or entitled to have eye tests?
I am diabetic type 2. My mother was diabetic type 2 and lost her sight because of it, so I think eye tests are important. (He knew that my mother had lost her sight through diabetes)
I go for diabetic retinopathy eye testing ONCE A YEAR. It takes place at my local hospital. As for the opticians I have a free eye test ONCE A YEAR. I have glaucoma and take drops to keep eye pressure in check. The hospital eye testing is totally different to optician eye test. Local optician is to keep check of your vision reading glasses etc; and the other is to check there is no problems behind your eye and that is why they take a photos of your eyes.
I don’t know about @WHT but I attend a separate glaucoma clinic at the hospital. I don’t have glaucoma, but it’s in my family and I have a precursor to it, pigment dispersion syndrome (as does one of my sisters) so am checked out for that. Annually at the moment, so 3 sets of checks a year for me and 2 sets of the delightful eye drops (eye screening and glaucoma clinic).Just curious, which checks your glaucoma?
To be honest, I'm not sure. I know they can up the frequency of the tests if you start issues. I'm still at the stage where I have a bit of background retinopathy but none they yet want to treat. I thought the idea was that they monitored till you got to the stage where you needed treatment and then treated, you may or may not have symptoms at that stage.
And I've got non diabetic eye issues (cataracts which will probably need treatment sooner rather than later because it's starting to get difficult to check for retinopathy behind them) and a condition where the surface of my eyes gets damaged easily (needs immediate treatment if it happens, but luckily it's a once in every ten years event). So don't assume that all visual issues are diabetic related.
There are normal vision deteriorations (hello reading glasses at age 50 and cataracts at an older age) which opticians should pick up. My non diabetic husband went from not needing reading glasses to +3s in the space of a couple of years....
Ordinary optician appointment went from annual to every two years during a previous round of austerity - some years ago.
The diabetic eye checks are annual.
However, I still get optician appointments annually because I have limited vision in one eye (refractive amblyopia) so I'm at a higher risk of legal blindness if something went wrong with my 'good' eye.
Thanks everyone. For some reason I didn’t get any notifications of the replies.
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