Eye treatment fears |  | "We're hearing from more and more people who have been told that they can benefit from the treatment, but that their Primary Care Trust is refusing to help them." Steve Winyard | Fading vision - are patients getting treatment on time? |
Wet Macular DegenerationEyesight is one of the most important senses that we have, and losing our vision can have a devastating effect. Inside Out has discovered that some health trusts will watch you go blind rather than fund the treatment that could save your sight. Fifty people a day lose their eyesight because of age-related macular degeneration (AMD) - a condition that can cause blindness in as little as three weeks. Drugs are now available which can treat AMD, but elderly people are being forced to fund expensive treatments rather than receive it on the NHS. Treatment deniedA report published by the Royal National Institute for the Blind (RNIB) suggests that 90 per cent of Primary Care Trusts are refusing to pay for these treatments.  | | The black spot on this eye reveals AMD |
Steve Winyard from the RNIB says: "We're hearing from more and more people who have been told that they can benefit from the treatment, but that their Primary Care Trust is refusing to help them. "So they are faced with that awful choice of having to raise cash, otherwise they will go blind."
Feeling cheatedDieter Klander was diagnosed with AMD. He was left with no alternative but to pay privately for Lucentis, a drug which is costing him around £2,000 per injection: "It seems inconceivable to go blind when there is treatment available that stops that process. "I feel personally cheated and I think everybody else who's got this ailment feels cheated."
 | | Paying for treatment - Cecilia Olesen |
Cecilia Olesen was also diagnosed with the disease and was refused treatment on the NHS. Unable to afford £2,000 for the drugs she needs, Cecilia is paying for a cheaper drug called Avastin, an unlicensed drug which has never been properly tested: "I'd much rather have a drug that's been tried and tested. "It's devastating to think that you have paid into the system all these years, and now when you need it you can't get any help."
Paying for healthy eyesProfessor Andrew Lotery, a top Ophthalmologist, told Inside Out that he's angry that patients are being forced to pay for this vital treatment:  | | Professor Andrew Lotery - keen to make drugs freely available |
"The National Health Service as I understand it should be free at the point of access and there shouldn't be a postcode lottery. "So I'm very keen for these drugs to become available on the NHS as soon as possible."
Although the Government is still assessing these new drugs, the Department Of Health says this is not an excuse for refusing free treatments. Links relating to this story: |