Skip to main content

The report aims to provide a summary of currently provided sensory care services in the context of poor eye health and hearing loss for April 2016 to March 2017.

Sight loss

  • The National Survey for Wales for 2016-17 asked if respondents’ eyesight was good enough to see the face of someone across a room, with glasses or contact lenses if they usually wear them. 3% of adults aged 16 or over responded that either they could not or with difficulty.

Primary eye care services

  • During 2016-17, 776,827 General Ophthalmic Service sight tests were paid for by the NHS, a 1.0% increase on the previous year.
  • 150,324 examinations were carried out under Eye Health Examinations Wales during the same year.
  • Of the 139,264 patients screened (with results reported) by the Diabetic Eye Screening Wales Service in 2016-17, 28.2% were found to have some degree of diabetic retinopathy (a small number were ungradeable).

Hospital eye services

  • There were 322,139 attendances to ophthalmology outpatient appointments in Welsh hospitals in 2015-16.
  • Health Boards received 91,846 referrals for ophthalmology in 2016-17, of which 31,824 were from GPs.

Rehabilitation

Low Vision Service Wales

  • 8,792 assessments were carried out by the Low Vision Service Wales.

People newly certified and/or registered as severely sight impaired and sight impaired

  • At 31 March 2016, over 16,000 people were registered with a visual impairment, of whom around half were registered as severely sight impaired and half as sight impaired.
  • 1,388 people were newly certified as sight impaired in 2015-16; over 55% of these were aged 80 years or over.

Workforce

  • There were 819 practitioners carrying out sight tests paid for by the NHS at 31 December 2016, 1 more than in the previous year and a 21.7% increase since December 2006.
  • At 30 September 2016 there were 137.7 whole time equivalent ophthalmology doctors directly employed by the NHS in Wales.

Hearing

  • Welsh Health Survey recorded that 16% of adults reported having difficulty with their hearing in 2015.
  • At 31 March 2017, 390 patients had been waiting for a hearing aid for more than the target 14 weeks.
  • At 30 September 2016 there were 133.6 whole time equivalent otolaryngology doctors directly employed by the NHS in Wales.

Reports

Sensory health: eye care and hearing statistics, April 2016 to March 2017 , file type: PDF, file size: 2 MB

PDF
2 MB
If you need a more accessible version of this document please email digital@gov.wales. Please tell us the format you need. If you use assistive technology please tell us what this is.

Data

Datasets and interactive tools

Sensory health: eye care and hearing statistics, April 2016 to March 2017: tables , file type: ODS, file size: 267 KB

ODS
267 KB
If you need a more accessible version of this document please email digital@gov.wales. Please tell us the format you need. If you use assistive technology please tell us what this is.

Sensory health: eye care and hearing statistics, April 2016 to March 2017: dashboard , file type: XLSX, file size: 921 KB

XLSX
921 KB
If you need a more accessible version of this document please email digital@gov.wales. Please tell us the format you need. If you use assistive technology please tell us what this is.

Contact

Stephanie Harries

Telephone: 0300 025 6186

Rydym yn croesawu galwadau a gohebiaeth yn Gymraeg / We welcome calls and correspondence in Welsh.

Media

Telephone: 0300 025 8099

Rydym yn croesawu galwadau yn Gymraeg / We welcome calls in Welsh.