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     Passports (Amendment) Bill passed

Continued from FrontPage of Article

Main Features of Bill

Let me now go through the main features of this Bill. First, we have defined the acts constituting optometry and opticianry in the Schedule. Only persons who are registered as optometrists or opticians are allowed to perform the respective activities listed in the Schedule. However, exemptions will be made in subsidiary legislation to allow health professionals such as medical practitioners and orthoptists to continue performing eye examination procedures which are part of their scopes of practice.

Part II of the Bill establishes the Optometrists and Opticians Board. The Board will be represented by members from the optometry, opticianry and ophthalmology professions, public officers from MOH and MOE as well as some lay-persons. The main functions of the Board are to approve or reject applications for registration, accredit courses in optometry and opticianry, and determine guidelines for the professional conduct and practice of optometrists and opticians. 

Part III sets out the role of the Registrar in maintaining the registers of optometrists and opticians, and the powers of the Board to take disciplinary action against registered optometrists or opticians, including the cancellation or suspension of the registration of such persons, and the imposition of monetary penalties. It also provides for a right for any person aggrieved by the decision of the Board to appeal to the High Court. Part III also requires optometrists and opticians to apply for practising certificates, which will be made renewable subject to mandatory continuing professional education to be specified in subsidiary legislation. This is to ensure that the practitioners continue to maintain a high level of competence so as to provide quality and safe primary eye care to the public. 

Part IV provides for offences in regard to the unlawful engagement in optometry and opticianry and fraudulent registration. A person who practises optometry or opticianry without registration or a valid practising certificate will be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $25,000 and / or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months for a first offence, and a fine not exceeding $50,000 and / or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months for subsequent offences. Under clause 29, the Board may also compound any offence prescribed as a compoundable offence under the Act. 

Part V clause 31 allows for the appointment of Inspectors to investigate into offences under the Act, and complaints against registered optometrists and opticians. Finally, under Part VI clause 39, the Contact Lens Practitioners Act will be repealed.

Implementation

Let me now touch on implementation. To minimise the impact of regulation on contact lens practitioners licensed under the Contact Lens Practitioners Act, licensed practitioners will be automatically registered as opticians and granted practising certificates in respect of opticianry when the Act comes into operation. Furthermore, contact lens practitioners with the appropriate qualifications and experience may also apply to be registered as optometrists. 

For optometrists, those with recognised qualifications and at least a year of optometry experience will be fully registered. Optometrists with less than a year of experience will be provisionally registered, and will have to work under supervision for 1 year before they become fully registered. 

For opticians, those with work experience of at least 5 years will be fully registered as opticians if they pass a competency test. Those with between 2 to 5 years of experience will need to undergo a part-time modular upgrading course.  There may be some opticians who do not intend to do any refraction but wish to do only dispensing; they will need to undergo a competency test or failing which, an upgrading programme but without the refraction component. This will ensure that they can uphold safe standards in dispensing. 

Opticians with less than 2 years experience and all new entrants to the profession will need to attend a certificate course in opticianry in order to qualify for registration. Singapore Polytechnic has organised a course to cater to these opticians. Such a course can be completed in 9 to 24 months. 

Further details of the registration of optometrists and opticians will be spelt out in subsidiary legislation to be enacted at a later date. My Ministry will be reaching out to existing optometrists and opticians through the media and seminars to inform the practitioners on the procedure for registration, including details on the competency tests and upgrading courses necessary for registration.

In preparing this Bill, the Ministry has consulted persons who will be affected by this new legislation, in particular the key representative groups of the professions such as the Singapore Optometric Association, Singapore Opticianry Practitioners and Singapore Polytechnic Optometry Centre. These stakeholders have been supportive of the Bill. We will continue to consult them as we develop the subsidiary legislation that will follow.

Conclusion

In conclusion, we are ready now to regulate the practice of optometry and opticianry. The existing Contact Lens Practitioners (CLP) Act has laid the ground for us to take this step, and years of training optometrists and opticians have created a sufficiently competitive market to support this move. I seek the House¨s support for this Bill to ensure that the public continues to enjoy high standards of eye care, in relation to the practice in optometry and opticianry. 

Mr Speaker, Sir, I beg to move.

Source: www.moh.gov.sg News Release 17 Jul 2007