- Make sure you can look at whether or not you can work with social distancing
- Can you contact trace all of the customers or the employees that you work with
- Do you or will you need PPE
The Board is working with the Ministry of Health (MoH) to find out exactly what the change of alert levels will mean for dispensing opticians and optometrists. Once we find out more details and understand more about what the Government will or will not allow, we will provide more guidance.
However, to allow practitioners to prepare for the move to Alert level 3, the Board is of the understanding that:
- All optometry practices will be allowed to open with limited operation and controlled entry
- They must be able to record details of all patients/customers, employees and any other members of the public entering their place of business to ensure effective contact tracing
- Emergency and acute consultations will be allowed as per Alert 4. At this point in time we are seeking clarity on other types of consultations and will communicate this as soon as we have further information from the MoH
- At a minimum, when seeing patients, practitioners should follow the current MoH public health measure guidelines, published on its website
- Due to the nature of optometry and optical dispensing, practitioners will most likely be in close contact with patients (less than 1m) and as such PPE will be required
- Routine examinations, recall examinations or examinations that could be deferred will not be allowed. Practitioners need to use sound clinical judgement and remember the big picture and ensure they follow the Government Alert 3 objectives
- Social distancing and staggered consultations will need to occur
- The MoH has recommended that people over 70 and those with pre-existing conditions, such as chronic respiratory disease - including severe asthma, bronchiectasis and COPD - and those who are immunocompromised, stay at home. Unless necessary, practitioners should plan not to see patients in this category
- Domiciliary visits, including rest home visits should not occur
The way dispensing opticians and optometrists practise, who they see and how they see members of the public will ultimately be different and practitioners will need to adapt and change. For the time being practitioners are being asked to continue: