SeeAbility

SeeAbility (formerly School for the Indigent Blind and Royal School for the Blind) is a UK charity that provides support and campaigns for better eye care for people with learning disabilities, autism and sight loss. In 2017 it reported that 236 people were supported in facilities such as residential homes, supported living and activity and resource centres across the south of England.[1] From 2013, SeeAbility launched its Children in Focus campaign, providing sight tests for children in special schools, after observing that many adults they worked with had not received good eye care when younger.[2]

History

The school was founded in 1799 by four philanthropists: London banker Samuel Bosanquet, Thomas Boddington, James Ware (an eye surgeon), and William Houlston (a charity worker).[3] Its original name was The School for the Indigent Blind, and it was established at St George's Fields, Southwark with the intention of educating young blind people and teaching them useful trades. [4]

From the 1860s, it was thought that the school should be moved to "another site more contributive to the health of the inmates and the advantage of the Charity".[5] In 1900, the school committee purchased 15 acres of land in Leatherhead at a cost of £4,000 and C. Pemberton Leach was appointed as architect. Work began on the new school building in May 1901 and the foundation stone was laid by HRH Princess Helena on 13 November.[6]

King George V granted the school royal patronage in 1911, and it was renamed The Royal School for the Blind. It consisted of residential workshops and when the Second World War began it was requisitioned by King's College Hospital as a national emergency hospital.

The school underwent rapid change in the 1970s when the accommodation was transformed with individual bedrooms instead of communal dormitories. The new, modernised building was formally opened by Diana, Princess of Wales in November 1982.[7]

In the 1990s the school widened its remit to include people with other physical and learning disabilities and expanded its services to reach out to people in their own homes. It changed its name to SeeAbility in 1994, and adopted the ethos 'Seeing beyond disability'.[8]

The organisation expanded to numerous sites across the south of England during the 1990s, 2000s and 2010s, opening sites in Maidstone, Seaford, Eastleigh, Oxfordshire, Devon, Horley, Tadley, Aldershot and more.

In 1999 SeeAbility opened a residential nursing service called Heather House In Tadley that was built specifically to support 16 younger adults with the very rare, degenerative Juvenile Batten Disease. The service is considered one of the leading providers for people with Juvenile Batten Disease, where the people supported live on average 3-4 years longer than at other services. Since opening, the service has supported almost 30 people with the disease.

In 2013 it launched the Children in Focus campaign, carrying out sight tests in special schools and calling for wide-ranging reforms to eye care for people with learning disabilities and autism. The organisation claims to be the biggest global study on the eye care needs of children with learning disabilities, after carrying out eye tests on over a 1000 children in special schools.[9]

In 2017, SeeAbility underwent a brand refresh and changed its strapline to 'Extraordinary every day'. The new logo reduced the size of 'See' and emphasized 'Ability' to reflect its shift in focus from sight loss to the intersection between sight loss and learning disability.

Children in Focus

The Children in Focus campaign was launched in 2013 in four special schools to carry out eye tests on children with learning disabilities and autism. By 2017 it was carrying out eye tests in 8 London schools and a school in Manchester.[10] The charity claims to be the biggest global study on the eye care needs of people with learning disabilities and autism.

In its four year report, Children in Focus - a clear call to action, SeeAbility published its findings, which showed that children with learning disabilities are 28 times more likely to have a sight problem, but much less likely to receive eye care. Nearly half (47.5) had a problem with their vision, a third (31.7%) needed glasses, over four in ten (43.7%) had no history of any eye care and only 7% had ever used a community optician. Of the children with a sight problem, more than a quarter had a problem that was not previously known.[11]

Supporters and ambassadors

In 1982, Princess Diana became the patron of SeeAbility and made a number of visits to their services until stepping down in 1996. Since 1999 Birgitte, Duchess of Gloucester has been the Patron. [12] The current president is Lord Coe and the vice-president is former Prime Minister Sir John Major.

In November 2017 the charity organised a fundraising stand-up night with comedians Sally Phillips, Jo Brand and Adam Hills.[13]

In the 2018 New Year's Honours, SeeAbility Eye Care and Vision Development Officer Scott Watkin was awarded a BEM for his work with the charity.[14]

References

  1. "Annual Report and Accounts" (pdf). SeeAbility. 2017. Retrieved 7 July 2018.
  2. "SeeAbility DO discusses the importance of children's eye care". Optometry Today. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  3. "SeeAbility, the operating name of the Royal School for the Blind, Leatherhead: Records". Surrey County Council. Surrey County Council. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  4. Darlington, Ida. Survey of London: volume 25: St George's Fields Charitable Institutions. London County Council. p. 65–71.
  5. "SeeAbility Records". Exploring Surrey's past. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  6. Vardey, Edwina (15 September 1988). History of Leatherhead: a town at the crossroads. Leatherhead and District Local History Society.
  7. "SeeAbility, the operating name of the Royal School for the Blind, Leatherhead: Records". Surrey County Council. Surrey County Council. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  8. "SeeAbility, the operating name of the Royal School for the Blind, Leatherhead: Records". Surrey County Council. Surrey County Council. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  9. "Children in Focus - a clear call to action". SeeAbility. SeeAbility. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  10. "Children in Focus". Optometry Today. Optometry Today. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  11. "SeeAbility launch new research report". RCOphth. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  12. "Princess Diana remembered: A look back on her many visits to Surrey". Get Surrey. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  13. "Jo Brand headlines comedy night in aid of sight loss charity SeeAbility at Richmond Theatre". Richmond and Twickenham Times. Retrieved 1 June 2018.
  14. "Charity worker recognised in 2018 New Year Honours". RNIB. RNIB. Retrieved 1 June 2018.

SeeAbility website

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