Topic: Optical
As the number of individuals who have the eye exams in the real world and buy their eyeglasses in the virtual world, complaints are rising according to United Kingdom's Optical Consumer Complaints Service. That's the post on Optician.
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As the number of individuals who have the eye exams in the real world and buy their eyeglasses in the virtual world, complaints are rising according to United Kingdom's Optical Consumer Complaints Service. That's the post on Optician.
ResearchandMarkets has compiled the following about the US retail optical market: The market, comprising some 13,000 optician stores, annually pulls in around $8 billion, while the 20,000 optometrists' offices have a slightly larger haul, $11 billion. There are three large opticians, Luxottica Retail (LensCrafters and Pearle Vision), Eye Care Centers of America, and US Vision.
"The optician segment of the industry is concentrated: the 50 largest chains hold about 60 percent of the market. The optometrist segment is highly fragmented," says the report. "Demand is driven by demographics, fashion, and changing healthcare practices. Most important is the aging US population, which is increasing demand for eye exams and glasses....Eyeglass purchases are mildly cyclical with the economy, as many consumers view extra glasses as an expense that can be deferred. Both segments of the industry are labor-intensive: average annual revenue per employee is about $130,000 for opticians and about $100,000 for optometrists."
While researching the information for another blog entry, we stumble upon the Center for Disease Control's Vision Health Initiative website.
First the VHI notes that "approximately 11 million Americans 12 years and older could improve their vision through proper refractive correction. More than 3.3 million Americans 40 years and older are either legally blind (having best-corrected visual acuity of 6/60 or worse (=20/200) in the better-seeing eye) or are with low vision (having best-corrected visual acuity less than 6/12 (<20/40) in the better-seeing eye, excluding those who were categorized as being blind). The leading causes of blindness and low vision in the United States are primarily age-related eye diseases such as age-related macular degeneration, cataract, diabetic retinopathy, and glaucoma. Other common eye disorders include amblyopia and Strabismus."
Second, it has excellent video on the eye's anatomy as well as common eye health issues, including refractive errors. Unfortunately we couldn't copy them into the blog or find them on YouTube. They could be valuable for instructing patients and new employees.
You can also access information about various states' vision health, such as Connecticut's:
Indicator | Percentage | 95% CI | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Visual Impairment | ||||||
Distance Visual Impairment | 14.2% | (13.0 - 15.5) | ||||
Near Visual Impairment | 35.8% | (34.0 - 37.6) | ||||
Eye Diseases and Injury | ||||||
Age-related Macular Degeneration | 4.0% | (3.4 - 4.7) | ||||
Cataract | 19.5% | (18.3 - 20.9) | ||||
Diabetic Retinopathy | 21.6% | (17.2 - 26.8) | ||||
Glaucoma | 4.2% | (3.6 - 4.8) | ||||
Access to Eye Care | ||||||
Eye-care Visit in the Past Year | 64.7% | (62.9 - 66.6) | ||||
Reasons for No Eye-care Visit | ||||||
Cost/Insurance | 17.9% | (15.5 - 20.5) | ||||
No Reason to Go | 56.9% | (53.6 - 60.1) | ||||
Dilated Eye Examination in the Past Year | 57.1% | (55.2 - 58.9) | ||||
Eye-care Insurance | 72.1% | (70.4 - 73.7) |
Rates of eye disease and vision impairment among older black Americans are two times higher than for older whites, particularly for glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy, due in part to less access to proper medical care, according to an announcement from the University of Alabama at Birmingham.
With a grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the university created the Translational Research Center (TRC) that will work with Cooper Green Mercy Hospital/Jefferson Health System to find ways to remove barriers to eye health care.
The state of Maine surprised eye care providers when it raised its MaineCare dispensing fee to $14.40, less than half what other states pay, reports the Portland PressHerald. To help children, "Portland school officials have raised more than $4,000 for a fund" to buy glasses for as many as 500 students who cannot afford them. The Portland Regional Chamber raised $1,000. Maine is not the only state in financial crisis and looking to cut costs, including Medicaid coverage.
TheStar, a New Zealand newspaper, reported that avoidable blindness had to be included in the broader development agenda to receive the necessary attention from policymakers, according to speakers at the World Congress on Refractive Error. Almost 700 million people in the world are vision impaired. Why? They can't get an eye exam or glasses. The World Health Organization has noted that the world economy annually loses $269 billion in productivity because of correctable myopia.
"Researchers from the Queensland Institute of Medical Research's Genetics and Population Health Division have tapped into data collected from more than 1,000 sets of twins to discover genes that affect people's eyesight," according to a story posted on MiVision.
The website also reports: "A new imaging system using six different wavelengths to illuminate the interior of the eyeball (ocular fundus) may pave the way for optometrists and ophthalmologists to easily screen patients for common diseases of the eye, such as age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and diabetic retinopathy." The system is described in the journal Review of Scientific Instruments.