The demand for eye care in England has risen sharply, outpacing the capacity of hospital eye services (HES) and leading to delays in treatment 1, 2. Ophthalmology now accounts for nearly 9% of all NHS outpatient appointments3, and acute eye problems are increasingly burdening emergency departments, with 1-6% of all A&E attendances being ocular emergencies4. Historically, patients with eye symptoms turn first to GPs, yet most GPs lack specialist ophthalmic training and equipment5. Up to 70% of eye-related A&E cases could be managed in primary care by specially trained GPs or optometrists6, 7, indicating a significant opportunity to shift care closer to home. The consequence of the status quo – overloaded hospitals and GPs – is delayed care, which risks avoidable sight loss2. With an ageing population and tight health service budgets, it is imperative to adopt new models of care that improve access and outcomes1, 8.
Optometry-led urgent and emergency eye care services - exemplified by the Minor Eye Conditions Service (MECS) and COVID-19/Community Urgent Eyecare Service (CUES) – offer an effective solution. These services enable patients with urgent ocular problems to be seen promptly by primary care optometrists and specially trained contact lens opticians* in some pathways, with the necessary expertise and equipment. Evidence from across England shows that optometrists can safely manage the majority of acute eye cases in the community, delivering timely care while reducing unnecessary hospital visits8, 9. Timely access to these schemes is an important patient benefit as sight threatening conditions with similar symptoms to non-sight threatening conditions can be identified early, which helps prevent avoidable sight loss.
Patient outcomes are excellent, and satisfaction is very high, as patients receive immediate specialist attention rather than waiting for GP or hospital appointments. Crucially, these schemes operate within optometrists’ core competencies – additional qualifications beyond standard optometry training are not required for delivering urgent eye care safely10, 11. Despite their proven benefits, MECS and CUES are not yet uniformly commissioned across all regions, and awareness among the public and some health professionals remains limited.
Policy action is needed now to expand and fully integrate optometry-led urgent eye care services across England. This brief presents key findings from the latest evidence and offers recommendations to capitalise on this under-used capacity in primary care. By commissioning and scaling up these services, policymakers and commissioners can alleviate pressure on GPs and hospital eye departments, reduce health inequalities in eye care access, and improve patient safety and experience. This aligns with the Westminster government’s 10-year health plan to move more services from hospital to community settings, where patients can access the right care closer to home8, 9, 10.