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T he newly appointed head of the ophthalmology department at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH), Dr Trevor Drakes, has pledged to address long waiting times for new patient appointments and surgical procedures. Emphasising the urgent need for change, he outlined his vision in the hospital’s public health talk dubbed Eye in Focus , which he said is to “offer a cure in a timely fashion to the patients because if we’re being honest, that’s not happening at this current moment”. “There may be long waits for new patient appointments.

There are even longer waits for surgical intervention,” he acknowledged. To reduce delays, the department chief proposed screening new patient referrals and educating healthcare providers on the information required to prioritise cases. Dr Drakes, a general ophthalmologist, admitted that the wait for cataract surgery is “quite long”, citing the department’s limited capacity as the primary obstacle.



“It’s not because of a lack of expertise but it has to do with the challenges which we face within the QEH. The ophthalmology department still continues to share a single operating theatre where the surgeons are unable to work more than every other week,” he said, suggesting that having another theatre could “easily double” output. He said he hopes to utilise the long-term dormant third floor of the hospital’s Lion’s Eye Care Centre built more than 30 years ago, which he said “has remained dormant for the last 10 years”.

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