Care beyond words: treating the non-verbal

3 February 2025
Winter 2025

Every patient deserves equal access to good-quality eye care, writes Helen Gilbert, so how can optometry settings provide the best level of service to those who are unable to communicate verbally?

It is estimated that one in five people across the UK will experience communication difficulties at some point in their lives (Royal College of Language and Speech Therapists, 2024).

This part of the population is diverse, spanning infants to the elderly, people with learning disabilities or a condition such as cerebral palsy, neurological disease, and those affected by stroke or dementia. 

Optometrists have a duty to make the care of the patient their first and continuing concern, to respect patients’ dignity and to treat every patient politely and considerately. “The presence or quality of speech is no indication of cognitive ability,” says Dr J Margaret (Maggie) Woodhouse MCOptom, Senior Lecturer and Head of the Down’s Syndrome Vision Research Unit at Cardiff University, who has worked with children and adults with special needs for over 40 years (see College guidelines, opposite). 

So how can optometrists ensure they provide fair, accessible and high-quality services for this patient cohort?

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Related further reading

The College of Optometrists and the Optical Fees Negotiating Committee (OFNC) call on the government to make a long-term commitment to primary eye care in its NHS 10-Year Health Plan as part of the shift from hospital to community.

The College of Optometrists calls for vital community minor and urgent eye care services to be universally commissioned in England

Optometrists talk to patients about eye health every day, and have an important role to play in health promotion and public health.