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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Five Things Your Eye physician Won't Tell You


7 Lies We Tell Our Doctors

As an Optometrist, there are many thorough answers I give patients to questions they ask. However, there are inevitable things that, although eye doctors won't say it outright, hold true over the board. Here are five things that your eye doctor will never tell you, with good reason:

1. You can ordinarily get your contacts economy online. This might be true, but unfortunately not at the most popular websites - and you may pay a excellent for the lower price. Your eye doctor gets trial lenses based on the whole of boxes they sell, so if you buy your lenses online, your doctor may not be able to provide you with replacements for ripped, torn or lost lenses.

2. You can probably find economy eyeglasses than what your eye doctor carries. Lenses have to be cut precisely, with specific curves and measurements - "close enough" just isn't good enough. You didn't come to my office to see roughly as well as possible, you came because you want clear vision. Often times paying more upfront will contain extra services or a built-in warranty.

3. No matter what you think or are told, your case is not unique. I hear the same stories all day, every day. Everybody says they had perfect vision until they turned 40. Everybody says they're "blind as a bat." It's rare that a patient walks in and says something we haven't heard. But these experiences allow us to help you swiftly and effectively, as long as we listen.

4. Not Everybody needs a annual exam. Young wholesome habitancy with garage vision may not need a annual exam. But I would in effect suggest a annual exam for anything over 40 years old or anything with a house history of any eye disease. However, if you're between 20 and 40 years old, you've never needed glasses and you've had your eyes dilated, you probably can come every other year to make sure your eyes remain healthy.

5. Your eye doctor works for you. Make sure you feel like you got your money's worth. If your vision isn't 100% crisp or if you have any questions, don't be bashful. Call your eye doctor and schedule a followup appointment. If it's within a cheap whole of time from your exam, there should be no payment for this. You are entitled to feel inevitable in the care your receive and the outcome of the exam. We will never be right 100% of the time, so we're not upset to have to see you again.

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