Postby Lynn White » Sat 19 Dec 2009 4:43 pm
Complex spectacle prescriptions are those that are over 10.00D in the spherical power.
The system in the UK (outside of Scotland) is that if you have a condition that can only be corrected by medically necessary contact lenses, then hospitals (or private contractors who contract their services to the NHS) will see you for tests free of charge and you get a subsidy towards the contact lenses through the HES (Hospital Eye Service). If you are in work, that means you pay £52.90 per lens.If you receive certain benefits, you will not have to pay this charge.
With spectacles, if you receive benefits you can get a voucher towards the cost of glasses that is worth a set amount of money dependent on your spectacle refraction. However, this is generally not enough to cover the total costs of glasses and you usually have to pay a fair amount towards them if you want a decent pair.
This is why you might have got CLs free but not glasses.
At least the NHS recognises medically necessary contact lenses. The private health insurance industry does not recognise them at all, even if you cannot see anything with glasses and rely on contacts solely to see.
Lynn
Lynn White MSc FCOptom
Optometrist Contact Lens Fitter
Clinical Director, UltraVision
email: lynn.white@lwvc.co.uk