Vulnerable children with disabilities missing out on crucial eye care

Seeability Shoot The Village School

Thousands of vulnerable children with disabilities missing out on crucial eye care in the South East, despite the high risk of sight problems

New research from SeeAbility, the national sight loss and disability charity, shows nearly four in ten (37 per cent) pupils attending special schools have no history of eye tests. This alarming figure is made worse as children with learning disabilities are 28 times more likely to have serious sight problems than other children.

There are 100,000 children in special schools in England and if these findings are replicated nationwide 37,000 children with disabilities are missing out on the eye care they need.

The statistics are in the new report ‘An equal right to sight’ from SeeAbility, published today (Friday 18 Septmber) as part of their Children in Focus Campaign launch. SeeAbility says it’s unacceptable that there is no national plan to meet the eye care needs of children with disabilities.

“We are calling on the government to make sight tests available in every special school in England. Children with profound disabilities may not be able to tell someone they have a sight problem, or get to a high street optician. Let’s bring much needed eye care to them instead,” says David Scott-Ralphs, SeeAbility Chief Executive.

“We want people to join our Children in Focus Campaign and sign the petition on our website. This will be handed in to the Department of Health as this is a major health inequality that the government and NHS have a responsibility to address.”

The report draws evidence from the charity’s research project with Cardiff University’s School of Optometry and Vision Science. SeeAbility’s team has been delivering specialist sight tests to pupils in a cluster of London based special schools since October 2013. The pilot scheme has since extended to seven schools.

“It is unacceptable that there is no national plan to meet their eye care needs. The Department of Health and NHS England need to make it easier for children with learning disabilities to get the sight tests they are entitled to, as well as any glasses they need,” says Dr. Cindy Tromans, Chair of the College of Optometrists Board of Trustees.

Despite the lack of national plan, many children have already benefited from SeeAbility’s sight testing programme. Lana – a pupil at The Village School in North London – has profound disabilities and cannot move or speak. Her sight test revealed that she has a high refractive error but Lana’s new glasses allow her to focus better and access a high tech system called an Eye Gaze. It means she can now communicate with her world. But her fellow pupil Brandon wasn’t so fortunate. In his first ever sight test at the age of 16 he was found to have significant refractive and anisometropic amblyopia in his right eye.

David Scott-Ralphs continues, “The government needs to make it easier for children with disabilities to get a sight test. Making sight tests available in every special school in England would be a start in making the reforms needed and help thousands of children with disabilities.”

Watch the Campaign video click here. If you want to support SeeAbility’s Children in Focus Campaign, sign their petition at www.seeability.org/petition or tweet #EqualRightToSight @seeability. You can also make a £5 donation by texting SEE to 70004.