The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Ninewells sight loss support scheme replicated in Japan

Service offers advice and reassuranc­e to affected patients

- GRAHAM BROWN gbrown@thecourier.co.uk

A pioneering service at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee to help and reassure people diagnosed with sight loss is now being replicated in Japan.

The Eye Clinic Liaison Officer (ECLO) service offers both emotional reassuranc­e and practical advice to patients who have been told they may lose some or all of their vision.

Acting as a bridge between health and social services, the initiative has now been taken to Japan by a visiting researcher who has maintained links with Tayside.

Junko Saito Kamo worked for two years in Ninewells Hospital’s department of ophthalmol­ogy as a visiting researcher.

She had previously been a cataract surgeon in Nishi Eye Hospital in Osaka. When she returned to Japan she kept in touch with colleagues at Ninewells and learned about the ECLO service introduced there by national sight loss charity RNIB.

The work of the service in Dundee and elsewhere impressed Junko so much she was eager to introduce a similar model at home.

“In Japan, there is no good liaison between first diagnosis of sight loss and rehabilita­tion or care,” she said.

“From what I have seen at Ninewells, the ECLO service model works well, as it provides that initial, quick low vision and mental health care. It offers a good link between ECLO staff and the ophthalmol­ogists.”

She now offers a similar service in Yamanashi, west of Tokyo, which runs a low vision clinic two afternoons per month, and said: “The Japan Ophthalmol­ogists Associatio­n has now asked me to write about ECLOs, and in 2021 there will be a Japanese congress about low vision rehabilita­tion and research and I will chair a lecture about the ECLO service.”

James Adams, director of RNIB

Scotland, said: “Our ECLOs provide an excellent service to people diagnosed with sight loss, to deal with immediate needs and also to give informatio­n as to where long-term support, if needed, can be sought.”

 ??  ?? Junko Saito Kamo worked for two years at Ninewells Hospital.
Junko Saito Kamo worked for two years at Ninewells Hospital.

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