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Working Life

What is an average day like?

An average day may involve any of the following:

  • specialty, general or acute clinics where patients are seen approximately every fifteen minutes
  • treatment clinics using laser, intra-ocular or peri-ocular medications
  • surgery – performing cataract surgery or other operations in a specialist eye theatre.

Most consultant ophthalmologists have two or three operating sessions per week, and three or four clinic sessions (which may include treatment clinics). Acute clinics (eye A&E) tend to be managed by staff doctors and trainees with senior advice available as required.

What are the hours like?

Ophthalmology is mainly a nine-to-five specialty. Out-of-hours work is lighter than many disciplines and shift work is unlikely. The specialist nature of eye emergencies means that ophthalmologists are required to be on call but ‘hospital at night’ generic teams deal with routine ward work out of hours. Small teams are on call overnight and at weekends.

Where is the work based?

Work is based in operating theatres, outpatient clinics and increasingly in community clinics. There is a small amount of ward work.

What people work in the same team?

Ophthalmologists are likely to work alongside:

  • optometrists (opticians)
  • orthoptists
  • specialist nurses
  • nurses
  • technicians
  • social workers
  • photographers.

Types of patients

Patients come from the whole age range, premature babies to the most senior members of the population. Patients are generally well and their conditions not life-threatening. Eye symptoms are very common and cause considerable anxiety so much advice and treatment is required. Ophthalmologists are always in demand.

Number of patients seen in a day

Typically you might see about 12 to 15 at a half day outpatients clinic and between four and eight in  a half day operating list. There are always urgent and extra patients and eye casualty clinics can be very busy. The work is challenging but restoring sight is very rewarding, with many grateful patients.

What is most enjoyable?

The mixture of medical and surgical treatments, variety of work and involvement in many other disciplines is very rewarding. The patient satisfaction rate is high, as is scientific interest, and ophthalmologists meet many interesting people.

What is most challenging?

Caring for people who are losing or have lost their sight is challenging. With the rapid advances in technology, there are new instruments and gadgets being introduced for diagnosis and treatment and ophthalmologists have to develop new practical skills throughout their career.

Opportunities for flexible training

There are opportunities for flexible training.

Opportunities for research and teaching

There are many opportunities for research and teaching. Most ophthalmologists consider teaching medical students, trainee specialists and other professionals such as orthoptists and nurses as an integral and enjoyable part of their job. There are research opportunities both laboratory-based and clinical in many places with exciting advances for example in genetic therapies and artificial vision. Many ophthalmologists continue to undertake research throughout their careers.

Quote from an ophthalmologist

"I became an ophthalmologist because it allowed me to blend medicine and surgery in a highly technical environment and in a discipline which is evolving. I wanted the challenge of learning new skills and knowledge, and the satisfaction of highly effective treatments. Lower levels of night work, good career prospects and no requirement to initially train in general surgery were also factors in choosing this specialty."

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