Preparing patients for allergy season
3 February 2025
Winter 2025
Some tree and grass pollens emerge in February. Other allergens come all year round. Anna Scott asks what optometrists need to know to support allergy sufferers.
Domains covered
Communication
Clinical practice
Allergy patterns have changed in the 30 years Professor Stephen Till, Consultant Allergist at Allergy London, has been studying them. “There’s been a significant increase in tree pollen, to the extent that we get many more patients with bad symptoms in early spring, but also the summer,” he says. “It’s much more common to be allergic to trees as well as grass now.”
Recent figures on ocular allergies are hard to come by, but one paper suggests that 8% of nearly 2,000 patients attending optometry practices in the West Midlands reported an ocular allergy (Wolffsohn et al, 2011 ). “As an estimate, roughly a third of the UK population has some degree of hay fever,” Stephen says. “And probably up to half of those have annoying eye symptoms as part of that.”
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Related further reading
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Optometrists talk to patients about eye health every day, and have an important role to play in health promotion and public health.