
Join Our Team & Help Protect People’s Sight!
The Diabetic Eye Screening Programme is growing, and we’re looking for an enthusiastic, caring person to cover maternity leave & help deliver eye‑screening across Herts & West Essex. Diabetes can affect eyesight, so spotting changes early directly helps people protect their vision.
What You’ll Be Doing
You’ll travel to different clinics taking photos and scans of patients’ eyes using state of the art retinal cameras. The images you obtain will help us identify early signs of problems so people can get the support they need.
Where You’ll Work
Our main hub is in St Albans, but we need to deliver screening at all our locations, including Harlow, Bishop’s Stortford, Stansted, Saffron Walden, Watford, Elstree & Loughton.
No Experience? No Problem.
You don’t need a background in healthcare or screening as we provide full training.
If you already hold the qualification you would join us at Band 4 (AfC)
About the Role
This is an active, hands‑on job where you’ll:
You’ll need a full UK driving licence and access to a car for work travel (unless exempt under the Equality Act 2010).
The Diabetic Eye Screening Programme supports people across Hertfordshire and West Essex who are living with diabetes. Because diabetes can affect eyesight, regular eye checks are vital —spotting changes early can literally help prevent sight loss. That’s where our screener/ grader team comes in: you’re the friendly faces who make a real difference every single day.
If you join us, you’ll be right at the heart of the action. You’ll be checking patients’ vision, instilling dilating eye drops, and using high‑tech retinal cameras to capture detailed photos and scans. It’s hands‑on, fast‑moving, and genuinely meaningful work. You’ll learn specialist skills, work with state‑of‑the‑art equipment, and play a key role in helping people protect their sight for the future.
Fun fact: The retina is the only place in the body where you can see blood vessels directly without surgery—so your work gives a real‑time window into someone’s health