Eye drops work in different ways, and to help you use them most effectively please speak toyour clinician, nurse or pharmacist to ensure that you understand why you are using your eye drops, how to use your eye drops and when to use your eye drops.
It is essential to use your eye drops as regularly as your clinician has instructed to help treatyour condition as effectively as possible.
However, eye drops are not the easiest of medicines to administer, and whether you are administering them to yourself or to another person there are several reasons it can betricky to put them into the eye.
For instance, patients have reported feeling their arm/hand shaking whilst holding the bottle above their eye and experiencing drops run down their face and into their mouth, leaving an unpleasant taste.
It is important to ensure that you position your eye drop bottle accurately over your eye at a safe distance and angle so the whole drop falls into the eye. This also helps ensure you don’t damage your eye surface, or contaminate the nozzle should it touch your eye or surrounding skin.
Together with our patients, we have developed the popular ‘wrist-knuckle’ technique to help make putting in eye drops easier and safer. Please read the step by step guide below for more information.
If this technique is difficult for you to follow, there are several gadgets available calledcompliance aids, which can help make putting in drops easier. These are available for Moorfields patients from the pharmacist or clinic nurse at all our sites.
Please be aware that some eye drops may sting or irritate for a short while after putting them in, but please do let a pharmacist or clinician know if symptoms become worse or if you experience any other side effects.
Authors: Sarah Thomas. Lead pharmacist and Fiona Chiu, associate chief pharmacist
Approval date: January 2018
Review date: January 2020