IN AN EFFORT to provide accessible eye care within the local community, Specsavers Hackney held an out-of-hours clinic for people experiencing homelessness in the borough.
The locally owned and run store, located at 314 Mare Street E8, offered free eye tests and glasses on 16th October, after business hours to create a comfortable and quieter environment where people experiencing homelessness could speak to a healthcare professional.
As part of a nationwide campaign for World Homeless Day, which took place on 10 October, more than 100 Specsavers stores and Home Visits businesses held out-of-hours or pop-up clinics and invited people affected by any form of homelessness to make use of their services.
In partnership with St Mungo’s, the clinic held at the Specsavers Hackney store welcomed members of the local community who received prescription glasses for reading and distance. Those who popped into the store were offered a sight test, OCT scan and glasses.
This clinic was part of Specsavers’ wider homelessness programme to mark World Homeless Day by continuing to improve access to eye and ear care for people experiencing homelessness or facing other barriers to care – whether financial, residential or not being eligible for NHS support.
Karun Aggarwal, retail director at Specsavers Hackney, says: ‘To mark World Homeless Day, we were pleased to host our first out-of-hours clinic to offer our services to people experiencing homelessness.
‘I am incredibly proud of the team and to St Mungo’s who helped make this possible. It is our long-term aim to ensure that everyone can access free, appropriate eye and hearing care which ultimately will help improve quality of life.
‘Specsavers as a business, and as a local team within the Hackney community, is committed to making healthcare accessible to everyone. I really hope that this helps raise awareness of the issue and the current barriers people are facing.’
As well as running eye and ear care clinics across stores outside of World Homeless Day, Specsavers also collaborates with Crisis, Vision Care, Big Issue and other homelessness services to create long-term solutions to remove healthcare barriers.
Specsavers is also calling for changes to government policy to remove unnecessary barriers that make it difficult for people experiencing homelessness to access the eye and ear care they need. Long term plans include influencing policy and systems, so people affected have access to free ear checks, eye tests and glasses, and replacement glasses if broken, lost or stolen.
To find out more, visit specsavers.co.uk/news-and-information/community/homelessness or contact the Specsavers Hackney store on 020 8510 0501 or book an appointment online https://www.specsavers.co.uk/stores/hackney