Eye Department
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Good Hope Hospital Eye Clinic
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Eye Emergencies in Birmingham
  • Specialist emergency eye care for the whole of the Birmingham area (sudden loss of sight, a painful red eye, nasty eyelid infections etc), is provided by Birmingham and Midland Eye Centre, on the City Hospital site. If you think you have such a problem, go straight there. You may have to wait several hours to be seen, and is it best not to drive.

  • Birmingham and Midland Eye Centre Casualty  at the Birmingham & Midland Eye Centre, City Hospital, Dudley Road, Birmingham B18 7QH, entrance off Western Road Tel: 0121-554 3801
    Evenings
    ..you have to attend the main City Hospital Accident and Emergency Department, where you will be transfered to the Eye team on call.
  • The department serves a lot of the West Midlands. The nearest large Eye Emergency service is Wolverhampton, and these 2 units serve most of the West Midlands.

  • If you are a health  professional in Birmingham and have a patient with a condition that needs urgent treatment, or you need to speak to the Eye Team urgently, ask to speak to and Eye Casualty member of staff tel 0121 554 3801 (24 hours, but urgent problems only at night). If your patient cannot travel, arrangments can be made for them to be seen.

  • If you are a post-operative cataract or glaucoma patient (an operation in the last two weeks) and your eye is slightly red, or your sight is slightly blurred, you may phone Sister or Staff nurse in the Good Hope Eye Clinic.
    If your eye is very red and the sight is getting worse and you are unable to contact the Good Hope Eye Clinic, go to the Eye Centre Emergency Department.

  • If your sight has changed gradually over weeks or months most optometrists can advise.

  • If you think you are allergic to glaucoma drops (alphagan perhaps), stop the drops, see the glaucoma drop page. Alphagan allergy is the most common.
    Xalatan drops may be a substitute, and your GP may advise, as can nurse in the Eye Clinic if you phone (you often do not need to attend).

  • If you develop asthma, and are using teoptic or timolol, stop them, and ask your GP to advise; often xalatan drops will be suitable.


----------------------Eye pages website feedback -----this page edited Feb 2007----------------------