ABDO responds to NHS ‘three big shifts’ proposals

ABDO has submitted its formal response to the government’s on-going public consultation on the NHS, designed to help shape the government’s 10-Year Health Plan.

Slated for publication next spring, the plan will be underlined by three ‘big shifts’ in healthcare: hospital to community; analogue to digital; sickness to prevention.

Published on the ABDO Consultations web page, the Association’s response was informed by feedback from members, and includes a call for the plan to address “the long-standing systemic challenges and inefficiencies within the commissioning and delivery of eyecare services across England, including the hospital eye service [HES]”.

The response also calls for a commitment to “addressing the long-standing funding gap for the NHS sight-testing service to ensure the viability of primary eyecare and the clinical teams employed within it” – and to “fully utilise the clinical skills of the registered eyecare workforce based in primary care, including dispensing opticians [DOs]”.

Short-term actions for change submitted by the Association include NHS email for all primary care clinicians, including DOs, widening of enhanced eyecare pathways, CPD funding for DOs to support primary care workforce development, and the addition of DOs to the ophthalmic performers list.

Longer-term actions for change suggested include addressing continued under-funding of the NHS GOS sight test and supporting practices to deliver the NHS Green agenda and become net zero ahead of the government’s 2040 target.

Prior to submitting its response, ABDO joined with the College of Optometrists and the Federation of Optometrists and Dispensing Opticians in issuing a joint statement “strongly backing” the government’s three big shifts for NHS England.

ABDO CEO Alistair Bridge said: “We are all aware of the huge challenges within the NHS – and the suggested ‘three big shifts in healthcare’ are long overdue. A greater focus on community rather than hospital care, and investing more in prevention mean that DOs could play an even bigger role in their patients’ clinical care in the future.”

Max Halford, ABDO’s clinical lead, commented that: “We recognise that there will be opportunities for our members to help in the shift of work from hospital to community, to ensure patients are seen in a timely manner, local to their home and by registered clinicians they know and trust. For this to happen, we need to ensure that DOs and their colleagues in the wider eyecare professions have access to digital technologies that will ensure patient data is easily accessed across the healthcare system.

“We would like to thank those members who shared their thoughts, which have helped to shape our response to this public engagement exercise,” Max added.

Individual responses to the consultation can be submitted via the Change NHS website.