A pioneering apprenticeship has been launched that will create new opportunities for people to train as orthoptists, helping to tackle growing vision problems in children and adults across England.

For the first time, aspiring orthoptists – specialists who diagnose and treat vision and eye movement disorders – can now train through paid apprenticeships in their local NHS hospitals, rather than having to relocate to attend university courses in Liverpool, Sheffield or London.

The timing is crucial, with childhood vision problems on the rise and waiting lists for eye care services growing. Orthoptists play a vital role in identifying and treating vision issues in children before the age of seven – after which treatment becomes much more difficult. They also support patients with serious neurological conditions such as multiple sclerosis and Parkinson’s disease.

Julie Dowdney, head orthoptist at University Hospitals Dorset and Chair of the Leaders of the Orthoptic Profession (LOOP) group of the British and Irish Orthoptic Society, said: “This is a game-changing moment for eye care in England. By training people in their local communities, we can better serve patients who need early diagnosis and treatment. This is particularly important in areas like southern England, where we’ve struggled to recruit enough specialists.”

The apprenticeship will:

  • Allow people to earn while they learn, removing financial barriers to entering the profession
  • Enable NHS trusts to ‘grow their own’ talent from their local communities
  • Help meet increasing demand for eye care services across the country
  • Create new career opportunities for people who can’t relocate for traditional university courses

This development marks a return to the profession’s roots, as orthoptists were originally trained in hospital schools before university-based courses became the norm.

The apprenticeship will maintain the high standards that have made British orthoptic qualifications internationally recognised while making the career more accessible to a wider range of people.

Find out more about BIOS’s work to promote the expansion of the orthoptic workforce here.

2024-12-23T12:54:07+01:00