For people facing extreme poverty and homelessness, Christmas can be one of the hardest times of year. And the festive period is when the difficulty of accessing basic healthcare is often felt sharply. That’s why Specsavers has expanded its partnerships with Big Issue, Crisis and Vision Care for Homeless People (VCHP) this festive season, building on a year-round commitment to break down barriers to essential healthcare.
Since November 2022, all Big Issue vendors have been offered free eye tests, OCT scans and glasses through Specsavers’ programme to support people experiencing homelessness. This also includes ear wax removal and ear checks – vital services that can be difficult to access without a permanent address.
“External eye infections, cataracts, untreated glaucoma – the risks [to people experiencing homelessness] are significant,” explains Michael O’Kane, Specsavers optometrist who volunteers at the VCHP clinic in Edinburgh Crisis Skylight. “One of the biggest issues is simply not having access to glasses.”
Michael recently treated a patient whose prescription was so strong – minus 16, which is extremely rare and debilitating – that she could barely see anything more than a few inches away from her eyes. “Her partner was with her, he was really protective of her and guided her everywhere. She’d lost her glasses years ago,” he says. “We were able to provide her with new glasses. The change in her quality of life is going to be massive compared to how she had been surviving.” Patients with this degree of myopia have a greater risk factor for visual conditions such as retinal detachment, so this must be carefully monitored throughout their lives. This was an easy solution to a severe problem: an eye test, a prescription and a free pair of glasses can change someone’s life completely.
Specsavers is expanding these vital services this Christmas. In London, where Crisis at Christmas clinics start on Christmas Eve, Specsavers’ and other volunteers will support 20 eye and ear care clinics. Additionally, Specsavers is running a further eight eye care and seven ear care clinics in regional Crisis Skylights in Birmingham, Oxford, Swansea, Merseyside and Newcastle. The need is urgent. According to VCHP, one in three people experiencing homelessness need glasses. Nearly 65% say they’d put off going to a high-street optician. And that can have far-reaching consequences.
“You need to have regular eye examinations to detect conditions like glaucoma,” Michael explains. “It’s a silent thief of sight. You won’t know you have it until it’s too late. As you lose field of vision, your brain continues to paint in the picture and compensate for the missing information, so [without an eye test] you’re ignorant of the fact that this field of vision is constricting. Eventually, you will go blind with it.”