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Optometric Physician vs. Optometric “Other”

on June 20th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

I lurk at Optiboard.com, and someone posted a message about how they don’t diagnose or treat glaucoma:

No, we haven’t been diagnosing and treating glaucoma in the office for the last 5 years. There are were so many changes in instrumentation that we thought we’d let the MDs pay those leases, and we refer everything suspect.

What the c—? If you say you refer “everything suspect,” then I suspect you either over refer or under refer.

Over referrals do your patients a disservice by increasing their healthcare expenditures. They have to become a new patient at some else’s office, repeat a lot of tests, and pay more since EyeMD fees on average are higher than EyeOD fees. Then they somehow get the idea that ophthalmologists must be the experts because my optometrist is too stupid to find out if I have glaucoma or not. They probably get this idea from their ophthalmologist telling them in the exam room, “I’m glad you came in to see me because optometrists are too stupid to diagnose and treat glaucoma, and you know this is true because a representative from that trade sent you over to me.”

I could also see how it would be very easy to under refer in that scenario, “well, it’s borderline, but I don’t want them to waste a lot of money seeing Dr. Expensive Ophthalmologist since they don’t have insurance, so I’m just going to decide that it’s okay. Besides, if it’s glaucoma, it could take years before they notice it.”

Obviously, neither scenario is acceptable. I wrote the following reply to that thread on the web board:

That makes me sick. For the sake of the optometric profession, practice to the fullest extent.

This is why some of us should have a special designation called “Board Certified Optometric Physician” and then the rest of you not interested in patient care can be called Optometric Lens Flippers.

Actually, I would like to add that optometry and optometrist are good names. Shame on those who disgrace them by not practicing basic eyecare.

I think the days of an ophthalmologist marketing him/herself in the yellow pages as “the glaucoma specialist in the valley” are coming to an end. All eyecare providers should be glaucoma specialists. If we don’t have certain instrumentation, we can work it out to send the patient to another office only for that particular test.

Can you imagine an optometrist saying “I don’t diagnose cataracts”? It’s the same thing with glaucoma. We diagnose and treat it, and send the patient to someone else only when necessary to do something outside the current scope of practice (ex. glaucoma or cataract surgery).

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Optometry – The Safest Profession

on June 19th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

I did not know this before, but apparently New Zealand measures the overall safety of different professions. You guessed it, optometry is the safest profession in New Zealand. I would guess that it has less to do with actual safety and more to do with the fact that the reporting is inaccurate. We optometrists aren’t very big complainers.

That broken back from leaning to reach the phoropter? It’s not bad enough to complain about, and it seems to be stable- the same amount of pain over the last few years.

That stomach ulcer? Hardly related to the stress at work. I’m sure it’s just from eating pizza, and it seems to go away for a few minutes if I down enough Ca++ carbonate.

What do I have to complain about anyway? Do I complain about insurance companies discriminating against me by not letting me on their panels, even though I am fully qualified? Well, actually, THAT I do complain about. Ticks me off to no end.

I think New Zealand probably forgot to measure the safety of being an ophthalmologist. They have their techs do refractions, office and optical managers do everything else, and they don’t have any problems being paneled. What a charmed life!

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Your U.S. Government is Hip

on June 14th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

I’ve known about the president’s weekly podcast from his weekly radio address for a while, but I was blown away when I found out that the Dept. of Health and Human services has a daily podcast called Daily Healthbeat Tip. Today’s 1 minute episode was about glasses safety.

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What’s the Deal with E-mail and OOGP?

on June 13th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

E-mail is a relatively simple Web 0.5 application that almost anyone can use. So what is the deal with people still not learning what BCC means? I just got an E-mail announcing OOGP’s new and improved website (and believe me, they needed the improvement).

Well, good job for updating your site, OOGP, but how come a 4.333 page list of e-mails were sent using “TO:” instead of “BCC:”? What’s the deal? If I were an ophthalmic vender, I would give Dave Langford a call to get a copy of that 4.333 page list. Maybe offer him some cash since that list would have to be full of active e-mail accounts for real eye doctors using OOGP.

Yup, give me a call, Venders. I’m waiting. I’ve also got school and business loans to pay off.

Now, you might say, “Well, spam filters frequently trash e-mails with BCC.” To which, I would say make an RSS feed on a blog/announcement page and ask your members to subscribe. That way everyone who wants it gets the content and announcements.

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Other Utah Bloggers

on June 10th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

Someone made a list of Utah bloggers and left me out. 😥 Optoblog.com gets no respect.

See the comments section. Steve added me lick-i-dy split. Nice guy.

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Eye Patch Puppets DVD

on June 3rd, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

An alert blogger spotted a DVD on the market that helps kids be excited about wearing an eye patch. Check out the doctor puppet. Doctor sure looks kind of scary, but other than that, this DVD by Bjort & Company could be a good idea.

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Optometrist in Smithfield Utah (UT)

on May 7th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

If anyone is in need of an optometrist in Smithfield, UT, then please see Summit Vision Center located at 136 E 800 S, Stc C, Smithfield, UT 84335. Their phone number is 435-563-2020. Summit Vision Center will open the first of June 2006. Hours will be:

Mon 9am to 5:30pm
Tues 9am to 7pm
Wed 9am to 5:30pm
Thurs 9am to 5:30pm
Friday 9am to 5pm
Saturday 9am to 3pm

Summit Vision Center wishes to become the primary eyecare provider of choice for Smithfield, Hyde Park, Amalga, Clarkston, Richmond…in short, all of northern Cache Valley. Of course, we welcome anyone living anywhere.

The optometrist, David J Langford, O.D., is from Idaho, but has roots in Cache Valley. He served in the U.S. Public Health Service at an Indian Health Service hospital for 2 years before arriving in Smithfield. Summit Vision Center’s philosophy is to provide excellent service and value in your eyecare and eyewear.

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PureVision Online Info

on April 27th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

I know that contact lens reps give us pamphlets all the time about their products, but I think it’s cool that they also have them online. I would much rather have it online since I usually just read it once then toss the very nice, cardstock, glossy paper away.

Here is an example of B&L PureVision. I originally got the link in a mass e-mailing from Review of Optometry.

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On-line Patient Scheduling

on April 17th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

Someone wrote about allowing patients to schedule on-line using the new Google Calendar.

Aside from any HIPAA issues, I think on-line scheduling done by patients themselves is a very bad idea. As one commenter mentioned, triage is a very important issue regarding when/how soon you get someone it. Also, practice consultants have various scheduling schemes to help us maximize our time for seeing full exams, follow-ups, special testing, etc. Given that we pay for their advice, why would we place control of scheduling into the hands of the general public?

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Interesting Healthcare Podcast by a D.O.

on April 10th, 2006 | Filed under Optoblog

There are great 2.5 minute healthcare podcasts done by D.O.s at the Ohio University. Actually, the program is called Family Health and is broadcast on radio stations. Overall, I rate the D.O.s involved very favorably towards optometry. They had two different podcasts devoted to “which type of eyecare provider should you choose.” While I felt like they emphasized a little to much that “optometrists are not physicians” it was still pretty good. Even though we go by the name optometric physicians, maybe he meant not a whole body physician?

The bone I would pick is the episode about sports-related eye injuries. I’ve seen several cases, and the majority I was able to handle without referral to a surgeon. Your healthcare dollar would be better spent seeing a private practice optometrist for your sports-related eye injury evaluation. Most should offer 24-hour emergency eyecare. If there were a big problem like retinal detatchment needing referral to a retinal surgeon, you would still pay less for the optometric physician visit than going to the ER. I personally wouldn’t go to your family physician right off the bat (assuming you only have an eye injury and not some multiple system problems) because most don’t have dilating eyedrops, eye pressure testers, biomicroscopes to check for inflamation in the eye, and special lenses for seeing every part of the retina to rule out detatchment.

But really a great site. Great information in little 2.5 minute snippits. You can browse their archives yourself, or I compiled a quick list of eye-related podcasts that I picked up as I quickly scanned their archives:


orbital cellulitis


uveitis


Poor Eyesight and Aging


Eye Floaters


Astigmatisms and 20/20 vision


Eye exercises won’t improve vision


Subconjunctival Hemorrhages


Antioxidant supplements


Pinkeye


colorblindness


Treatments for Macular Degeneration

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/25210.ram
photosensitivity

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/25129.ram
Dry Eyes

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/25124.ram
Eye-care professionals

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/25123.ram
Vision changes in middle age

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/25099.ram
Causes and treatment of Glaucoma

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/25007.ram
The Eye Doctors

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/24215.ram
preventing macular degeration

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/24214.ram
Macular Degeneration

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/24205.ram
Pinkeye

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/24140.ram
Vision problems and young children

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/24121.ram
The causes of glaucoma

http://fhradio.org/RAM/archives/24051.ram
Eye Injuries cuased by sports

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