Specialist eye care organised the way patients and referrers actually search for it.
This version takes the strongest content patterns from high-performing ophthalmology sites and puts them into a sharper, more current interface. It is built around service clarity, referral pathways, and information design.
Clinical services
The better specialist sites are all service-led. That is what helps patients self-sort and what gives referrers confidence that they are in the right place.
Cataract assessment and surgery
Clearer information about symptoms, assessment, lens discussion, and surgical planning.
Glaucoma diagnosis and management
Ongoing monitoring, pressure assessment, optic nerve review, and treatment planning where required.
Macular degeneration and retinal care
Assessment and management of common retinal and macular conditions, including investigation of visual change.
Diabetic eye assessment
Structured retinal review and follow-up planning where diabetic eye disease is a concern.
Dry eye and ocular surface care
Assessment of persistent irritation, fluctuation, watering, and ocular surface discomfort.
Eyelid and ocular surface conditions
Evaluation of selected eyelid, ocular surface, and related eye concerns depending on the final clinician mix.
Referrer information
A strong referrer page should explain who the practice sees, how referrals are accepted, what supporting information helps, and how urgent concerns should be handled.
That content is one of the biggest gaps on weaker medical sites, and one of the clearest differences on stronger ones.
Appointment process
The reviewed ophthalmology sites that perform best all make the process clearer: what to bring, whether testing or dilation may happen, and what patients should expect after their visit.
That reduces friction and makes the practice look more organised before the first phone call even happens.
Frequently asked questions
Referral requirements should be confirmed with the clinic when booking, but the website should explain this clearly once final practice settings are confirmed.
Bring your referral if you have one, your glasses, medication list, and any recent eye letters, scans, or test results.
Some appointments may involve dilating drops, depending on the reason for review and the tests required.
Specialist eye appointments can take longer than a standard consultation because imaging and testing are often part of the visit.