Thursday, September 26, 2013

Lord LASIK Voted Best Laser Eye Surgery Center in Vancouver

Lord LASIK Vancouver is this years Best Laser Eye Surgery Center as per Georgia Straight bookworms who voted in the eighteenth Annual Best of Vancouver Awards. Lord LASIK has been furnishing LASIK surgery to the Vancouver range for a considerable length of time, and the focuses heading surgeon has performed more than 85,000 strategies. This grant is an alternate indication of King Lasiks move to the highest point of the industry in Vancouver, as well as crosswise overa  Canad and the U.s. Northwest. 

Each year, Georgia Straight conducts a Best of Vancouver challenge that incorporates bookworms votes on almost everything you can envision, from particular sorts of restaurants to city life to individual bargains to medicinal suppliers, and additionally a rundown of patrons Best picks. With over 260 classifications and victors chose from everywhere on Lower Mainland, the Best of Vancouver offers an expansive determination of organizations that have astounded book lovers, and the rivalry for each class is harder than you may envision.

 Laser surgery can have permanent side effects such as dry eyes and poor night vision

Victors of the recompense are regarded throughout the official advertisement, which go about as a sort of bigger service to praise Vancouver and everything the city needs to offer. Pulling the citys best together in one room offers extraordinary promoting and systems administration chances for the guides of these huge names and climbing stars, and makes something of a gathering setting for them to praise together. 

There are numerous laser eye focuses in the Vancouver range, and King Lasiks determination not long from now sets them above many rivals in the industry. The inside has made a name for itself dependent upon their patient-centered approach to give a second thought from conference to surgery, noteworthy experience with different optical surgery forms, and devotion to furnishing the right approach for every patients singular vision revision objectives. With the proclamation of having been chosen by Vancouver, King LASIK has an alternate bit of proof that this keep tabs on predominant administration and forethought is meeting expectations. 

About King LASIK Vancouver  

Dr. Joseph Kings laser eye surgery focus uses the most recent surgical and symptomatic procedures and advances to guarantee the best remedial laser eye surgery comes about for patients. The whole office is based an attention on humane understanding consideration, careful, expert meeting and medicine, and utilizing the best high-tech apparatuses to offer the best results. Serving the more terrific Vancouver zone with patients from Alberta and British Columbia, King LASIK Vancouver has endeavored to procure its notoriety and be picked as one of the best laser eye surgery focuses in the district. Visit .

Huge Cataract Backlog for Oshakati Hospital

THE Oshakati State Hospital acting therapeutic superintendent, Josephine Augustus, said they right now have a build-up of more than 600 waterfall operations. 

Following the time when the first waterfall surgical crusade directed at Oshakati Hospital in 1996, with the logistical and specialized underpin of the Government of Israel, no less than 275 patients have had their sight restored and what added up to 4 010 individuals have profited from the same fight between 1996 and 2013. 

"I might want to thank the master group, who notwithstanding numerous tests, relinquished their opportunity and added endeavors to the honorable explanation for sight conservation and restoration by enhancing the eye soundness of individual Namibians," said Augustinus at the end function of the eye waterfall battle held at the doctor's facility a week ago Thursday.

 

Augustinus said the healing facility was short of pro base as the ophthalmic ward, surgical and counseling rooms and subsidizing.

"Our healing facility is experiencing huge infrastructural overhauling and remodels to cater for office space for different restorative orders and clinical backing administrations yet without authority aptitudes and fitting innovation, such endeavors are sure to fall flat in achieving the sought outcomes,"augustinus said. 

Talking at the same occasion, the Minister of Health and Social Services, Richard Kamwi, said the administration is likewise confronted with a ton of tests like poor foundation at different healing centers countrywide and reserves. 

"Individuals should judge us with negative considerations as well as extol us when fundamental," Kamwi depicted. He said they will send more than 270 learners abroad to Russia and Cuba to seek after their studies with a completely paid grants.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Namibia: Huge Cataract Backlog for Oshakati Hospital

THE Oshakati State Hospital acting medical superintendent, Josephine Augustus, said they currently have a backlog of more than 600 cataract operations.

Ever since the first cataract surgical campaign conducted at Oshakati Hospital in 1996, with the logistical and technical support of the Government of Israel, at least 275 patients have had their sight restored and a total of 4 010 people have benefited from the same campaign between 1996 and 2013.

"I would like to thank the specialist team, who despite many challenges, sacrificed their time and added efforts to the noble cause of sight preservation and restoration by improving the eye health of fellow Namibians," said Augustinus at the closing ceremony of the eye cataract campaign held at the hospital last week Thursday.

Augustinus said the hospital was short of specialist infrastructure like the ophthalmic ward, surgical and consulting rooms and funding.

"Our hospital is undergoing massive infrastructural upgrading and renovations to cater for office space for various medical disciplines and clinical support services but without specialist skills and appropriate technology, such efforts are bound to fail in bringing about the desired outcomes,"Augustinus said.

Speaking at the same event, the Minister of Health and Social Services, Richard Kamwi, said the government is also faced with a lot of challenges like poor infrastructure at various hospitals countrywide and funds.

"People must not only judge us with negative thoughts but they should also applaud us when necessary," Kamwi narrated.

He said they will send more than 270 students abroad to Russia and Cuba to pursue their studies with a fully paid scholarships.

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

New Laser Provides Better Treatment For Eye Diseases in Diabetes Patients

A new laser is helping experts at the Truhlsen Eye Institute at the University of Nebraska Medical Center provide better treatment for eye diseases. This advanced laser can prevent blindness for some patients with serious conditions.

"This new laser with yellow light is currently the only one of its caliber in the U.S., and there's only one other being used in the world right now," said Quan Dong Nguyen, M.D., the McGaw Memorial Endowed Chair in Ophthalmology and director of the Eye Care Hospital

On July 22, the first patient received treatment from the laser for proliferative diabetic retinopathy, the most severe stage of eye disease caused by diabetes.

"This laser is the most cutting-edge laser device available today," said Diana Do, M.D., associate professor of ophthalmology and director of the Carl Camras Center for Innovative Clinical Research at the Truhlsen Eye Institute and the retina specialist who performed the first treatment. Read More...

Monday, September 23, 2013

SouthEest Eye Specialists First In Area To Use Lasers For Cataract Surgery

SouthEast Eye Specialists announced Monday that it will be the first practice in the greater Chattanooga area to offer the LenSx femtosecond laser technology as an option for surgical removal of cataracts.  

With this new technology, surgeons can now capture an incredibly precise, high-resolution image of the eye and use a computer-guided laser to make customized incisions that are specifically tailored to the unique characteristics of the patient’s eye.  This advancement means surgeons can improve the accuracy and consistency of the procedure while providing patients with more predictable results and a faster healing time, officials said.

Prior to the introduction of the LenSx Laser, traditional cataract eye surgery was done by making several small incisions on the cornea with a handheld surgical blade.  With the LenSx Laser, surgeons will use a small beam of laser energy to make these small incisions in the cornea without the use of a manual surgical blade. 

In addition, the LenSx Laser features real-time video and imaging tools to give the surgeon an accurate, three dimensional visualization of what is occurring inside the eye. These visuals allow the surgeon to precisely program the size, shape and location of each incision based on the unique characteristics of the patient’s eye.  This level of precision and customization is not possible today with traditional cataract procedures that use a manual surgical blade, officials said. Continue Reading...

King LASIK Voted Best Laser Eye Surgery Center in Vancouver

King LASIK Vancouver is this years Best Laser Eye Surgery Center according to Georgia Straight readers who voted in the 18th Annual Best of Vancouver Awards. King LASIK has been providing LASIK Eye Surgery to the Vancouver area for years, and the centers leading surgeon has performed more than 85,000 procedures. This award is another sign of King LASIKs climb to the top of the industry not just in Vancouver, but across Canada and the U.S. Northwest.

Every year, Georgia Straight conducts a Best of Vancouver contest that includes readers votes on nearly everything you can imagine, from specific types of restaurants to city life to personal sales to medical providers, as well as a list of contributors Best picks. With over 260 categories and winners selected from all over Lower Mainland, the Best of Vancouver offers a broad selection of businesses that have impressed readers, and the competition for every category is tougher than you might expect.

Winners of the award are honored during the official announcement, which act as a kind of larger ceremony to celebrate Vancouver and everything the city has to offer. Pulling the citys best together in one room offers great marketing and networking opportunities for the leaders of these big names and rising stars, and creates something of a party setting for them to celebrate together. Read Full Story...

Ocular gets FDA OK on cataract surgery med device

One month in the wake of reporting a gathering with the U.s. Nourishment and Drug Administration's Ophthalmic Devices Panel, Ocular Therapeutix said Friday that the board voted energetic about its Premarket Approval (PMA) requisition for the organization's Resure Sealant, a manufactured, polyethylene glycol (PEG)-based hydrogel which is connected as a fluid and gels in situ on the visual surface. 

Bedford, Mass.-based Ocular said its Resure Sealant is protected and successful to administer corneal wound releases taking after waterfall surgery. The choice was dependent upon Ocular's information from the Resure Pivotal study, a 488-patient clinical trial. Consistent with the information, the Resure Sealant effectively forestalled wound spills in 95.9 percent of cases, contrasted with sutures at a rate of just 65.9 percent. Furthermore utilization of the sealant was associated with fewer unfriendly occasions when contrasted with suture and was generally endured by patients, as per the organization. 


An eye-care professional examines a woman's eyes.

"Preceding apparatus provision, about 50% of all acceptable corneal wounds spontaneously spilled in the trial, while the dominant part of remaining entry points spilled with negligible incitement," expressed Amar Sawhney, president and CEO of Ocular Therapeutix, Inc. "Suturing has so far been the best conclusive response for treating spilling wounds, then again, in this trial the Resure Sealant was showed to be better than sutures for administration of wound breaks." 

It has been a beneficial year for Ocular, a secretly held firm established in November 2006, structured to concentrate on the improvement and commercialization of opthalmic remedial items. 

In June, Ocular brought $8.5 million up in a Series E adjust of value financing from Ascension Health Ventures and Baxter Ventures. The round accompanied a growth of its $23 million Series D adjust of financing headed by Ascension Health Ventures, which shut in

Sunday, September 22, 2013

Flying Eye Hospital Set to Arrive in Doha Today



DOHA: HRH Sophie the Countess of Wessex will be arriving in Doha today as part of an international campaign to raise awareness on prevention and treatment of blindness, an affliction that affects some 1.5 million children around the world.

The Countess will be accompanied by the renowned ORBIS Flying Eye Hospital - the world’s only eye hospital housed within a DC-10 airplane.

The Countess of Wessex, who is a longstanding patron of global initiatives to prevent and treat blindness among underprivileged communities around the world, will lead a series of events and meetings in Qatar to build on the strong partnerships and alliances that were forged last year when ORBIS made its inaugural visit to Qatar.

The Countess of Wessex will participate in a series of tours for local organisations in Qatar to visit the aircraft and experience its sophisticated facilities, which include a fully equipped ophthalmic operating suite, a four bed pre-operation and recovery room, as well as a sub sterile and laser room. Read More...

Friday, September 20, 2013

Statins Linked to Raised Risk of Cataracts

THURSDAY, Sept. 19 (HealthDay News) -- The statin medications that millions of adults take to lower their cholesterol levels may also raise their risk of developing cataract eye surgery, a new study suggests.

This is the latest of several studies looking for a link between statins such as Lipitor and Zocor and cataracts, a clouding of the lens of the eye. The results to date have been conflicting and inconclusive, the researchers note.

"Cataracts are a main cause of poor vision and blindness, specifically for the elderly," said lead investigator Dr. Ishak Mansi, of the VA North Texas Health System in Dallas.

"This study cannot identify that statins cause cataracts; rather, it identifies statin use as associated with a higher risk of being diagnosed with cataract," he added.

The report, published Sept. 19 in the online edition of JAMA Ophthalmology, involved almost 14,000 men and women, 6,972 pairs of statin users and nonusers, who were seen by the military health care system from October 2001 to March 2010.

Those taking statins had a 27 percent increased risk of developing cataracts compared with nonusers, the researchers found.

"We tried to slice the data in different directions and look at our findings from different angles and approaches of analyses to ensure its consistency," Mansi said. "Consistently, statin use was associated with higher risk of cataract."

The findings should encourage patients to talk with their doctor about the risks and benefits of these drugs, but they shouldn't discontinue them based on this study, Mansi added.

"These medications have been a main tool in treatment of heart disease and should not be stopped because of a small higher risk of association with other diseases," he said. Read More...

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Everything You Need to Know About Getting Laser Eye Surgery


http://www.devieyehospital.in/bannergallery/banner31.jpg
Tonya Lane, 25, went for a laser eye surgery consultation on a whim early this year while having her eyeglasses prescription updated. Despite her initial apprehension, she underwent the procedure and emerged with 20/20 vision.

“The only thing I was really scared of was going blind. I know with any surgery there are risks. For this fear, I couldn’t do much except look at the stats, and I had better chances of winning the lottery so I figured it would never happen,” said Lane . “The doctor and his assistant put tape on my eyes to keep them open. I looked into a light for five seconds and my left eye was done. I then looked into a light for another five seconds and the right eye was done. Immediately after the surgery, they asked me to open my eyes and I didn’t want to because I could not believe that I would be able to see without glasses and I would probably start crying. Of course, I had to open them and I could actually see right after. It was a few seconds and I went from being ‘near-blind’ to being able to see.

According to Dr. Sheldon Herzig, medical director and co-founder of Toronto’s Herzig Eye Institute,Laser technology is always changing to continue improving the results, even though they are already excellent. LASIK (laser-assisted in situ keratomileusis) is used to correct near and farsightedness as well as astigmatism. The trend is towards more individual customization as well as offering alternative treatments other than laser when they are safer and more appropriate.” Continue Reading...

Cataract Surgery May Promote Longer Overall Survival

Timely cataract surgery resulting in enhanced vision was associated with a 40% reduction in mortality risk compared with no surgery, according to a new study published in the September issue of Ophthalmology.

The association, which was independent of variables such as number of medications and comorbid conditions, suggests that correcting visual impairment (VI) caused by cataracts has health benefits beyond merely improving eyesight, noted coauthor Jie Jin Wang, MMed, PhD, from the Centre for Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology, and Westmead Millennium Institute, University of Sydney, and the Centre for Eye Research Australia, University of Melbourne, Australia, in a press release. The findings also support previous research showing a link between VI and increased mortality risk.

The investigators, lead by Calvin Sze-un Fong, MBBS, also from the Centre for Vision Research, Department of Ophthalmology, and Westmead Millennium Institute, used data from the Blue Mountains Eye Study (BMES) cohort, a prospective population-based study of vision and common eye diseases among older Australians. Study participants were aged 49 years or older at baseline and were living in a suburb of Sydney. They were identified in a door-to-door census and invited to have detailed baseline eye examinations between 1992 and 1994 (BMES I), with follow-up examinations in 1997-1999 (BMES II) and 2002-2004 (BMES III). Read More...

Friday, September 13, 2013

Study Shows that People Who Undergo Cataract Surgery to Correct Visual Impairment Live Longer

People with cataract-related vision loss who have had cataract surgery to improve their sight are living longer than those with visual impairment who chose not to have the procedure, according to an Australian cohort study published this month in Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. After comparing the two groups, researchers found a 40 percent lower long-term mortality risk in those who had the surgery.

People with cataract-related vision loss who have had cataract surgery to improve their sight are living longer than those with visual impairment who chose not to have the procedure, according to an Australian cohort study published this month in Ophthalmology, the journal of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. After comparing the two groups, researchers found a 40 percent lower long-term mortality risk in those who had the surgery.

The research is drawn from data gathered in the Blue Mountains Eye Study, a population-based cohort study of vision and common eye diseases in an older Australian population. A total of 354 persons aged 49 years and older and diagnosed with cataract-related vision impairment – some of whom had undergone surgery and others who had not – were assessed between 1992 and 2007. Adjustments were made for age and gender as well as a number of mortality risk factors, including hypertension, diabetes, smoking, cardiovascular disease, body mass index and measures of frailty and comorbid disease. Follow-up visits took place after five and ten years since the baseline exam.

Previous research had indicated that older persons with visual impairment were likely to have greater mortality risk than their age peers with normal vision, and that cataract surgery might reduce this risk. These studies – unlike the Blue Mountains Eye Study – compared people who had undergone cataract surgery with those in the general population or with those who had not had cataract surgery, and did not link vision status to the surgical status.

"Our finding complements the previously documented associations between visual impairment and increased mortality among older persons," said Jie Jin Wang, Ph.D., of the Westmead Millennium Institute and one of the lead researchers of the study. "It suggests to ophthalmologists that correcting cataract patients' visual impairment in their daily practice results in improved outcomes beyond that of the eye and vision, and has important impacts on general health."

The association between correction of cataract-related visual impairment and reduced mortality risk is not clearly understood, but plausible factors may include improvements in physical and emotional well-being, optimism, greater confidence associated with independent living after vision improvement, as well as greater ability to comply with prescription medications.

Dr. Wang noted one limitation of the study is that participants with cataract-related visual impairment who did not have cataract surgery could have had other health problems that prevented them from undergoing surgery, and that these other health problems could partly explain the poorer survival among non-surgical participants. This issue is addressed by the researchers in a subsequent study.

Caused by the clouding of the lens, cataract is a leading cause of treatable visual impairment that will affect more than half of all Americans by the time they are 80 years old. Surgical removal of the opaque lens with an artificial lens implanted is a successful procedure of cataract treatment. If completing everyday tasks is difficult, cataract surgery should be discussed with an ophthalmologist – a medical doctor specializing in the diagnosis, medical and surgical treatment of eye diseases and conditions.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Surgeon calls for advanced cataract surgery on the NHS

A heading UK eye surgeon, Milind Pande, is checking National Eye Week by calling for progressed waterfall surgery to be generally accessible to all, incorporating patients on the NHS, to enhance the personal satisfaction for the UK's ageing populace. 

Mr Pande (pictured) is the therapeutic chief and ophthalmic surgeon at the Vision Surgery and Research Centre in East Yorkshire and is part of a fight to make propelled waterfall surgery accessible on the NHS in the UK. He is part of a vast bunch which advances master suggestions on patient decision in waterfall surgery. 

In a press proclamation, Mr Pande said: "National Eye Week is an incredible chance to stretch the vitality of general eye forethought to anticipate future issues. Be that as it may, sometime later, our ageing populace implies waterfalls will come to be all the more normal and the far flung accessibility of progressed medications for these will be principal."

 Close-up of a man applying drops to the eye.

Mr Pande, previous past president of the United Kingdom and Ireland Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons, said that by the age of 80, the lion's share of individuals either have a waterfall, or have had waterfall surgery. Waterfalls are the commonest explanation for visual inability in the UK and worldwide. More than 325,000 waterfall surgery systems are completed in the UK every twelve-months. 

"In the most recent 10 years critical developments have been made which now empower us to restore the vision of a waterfall patient to that of a standard adolescent grown-up without specs – a major ophthalmic accomplishment," Mr Pande included. "As of now waterfall patients in the NHS are not fit to profit from such progressed refractive waterfall surgery and the restored vision that this offers is confined to private practice. 

"For NHS patients, fundamental routine waterfall surgery leaves the lion's share of patients requiring displays for very nearly all exercises after surgery. The new innovatively progressed lenses, which we use in propelled waterfall surgery, intend patients no more extended need glasses. With access to propelled waterfall surgery restricted to the private part, the greater part of waterfall patients don't have admittance to this sort of progressed medication. 

"I accept patients ought to be completely educated of their choices with the intention that they can settle on an educated decision on their waterfall medication, regardless of who is putting forth the medicine. This is basically set back the ol' finances nonpartisan as the measure of cash used by patients on long lasting displays after surgery far exceeds the additional cost of progressed waterfall surgery. 

"Giving a case sample, Mr Pande remarked: "Recently, a patient of mine who had worn thick displays the greater part of her existence went out of healing center a hour or thereabouts in the wake of having progressed waterfall surgery utilizing supplanting intraocular lenses and inside a couple of days she was equipped to drive, read a book and even take a gander at a phone index. 

"These propelled systems have the capacity to help our ageing populace see far and away superior to they did when they were more youthful, an accomplishment which preferably each waterfall patient ought to have the ability to

Monday, September 9, 2013

Ads Seek to Clear Up Qualms About Cataract Surgery

Though it ultimately proved unsuccessful, the advertising campaign that introduced the phrase “This is not your father’s Oldsmobile” has had considerable influence on popular culture, with the phrase entering the vernacular as shorthand for something, usually in the commercial realm, that has been updated for a new generation of consumers.
Take, for instance, a new campaign from the Alcon division of Novartis, which features print advertisements that carry the headline “This is not your mother’s cataract surgery.” The campaign, now under way, is meant to educate the baby boomer generation about cataract surgery and how, as the ads put it, “today’s advanced technology” enables doctors to offer patients “an opportunity to get your youthful vision back.”
The campaign, with a budget estimated at $3 million, includes, in addition to the print ads, a special Web site, or microsite, and digital ads. The agencies involved in the campaign include HCB Health in Austin, Tex., for the creative duties; the Starcom division of the Starcom MediaVest Group, part of the Publicis Groupe, for the media duties; and Tribal Worldwide, part of the DDB Worldwide unit of the Omnicom Group, which built the microsite.
The centerpiece of the campaign is a collaboration between Alcon and the AARP Media Sales unit of AARP that involves AARP print and digital properties. More than $1 million of the total ad budget is to be spent in the properties represented by AARP Media Sales, which include AARP The 
.Eye_surgery : Woman receiving Plastic Operation
As part of the collaboration, Alcon and AARP teamed for a telephone survey of 1,000 members of AARP, age 50 and older, to find out about their awareness and understanding of cataracts and cataract surgery. The results of the survey helped guide the creation of the campaign.
The partnership is another example of an increasingly popular trend on Madison Avenue known as content marketing, which brings together brands and media companies for advertising that is primarily meant to be entertaining or informative rather than using hard-sell tactics to peddle products.
That fits well with the Alcon campaign because its principal goal is to advocate for cataract surgery in general among consumers rather than promote specific Alcon surgical products to them or medical professionals.
“Typically, our marketing efforts have been geared to professional audiences,” says Seba Leoni, vice president and general manager for United States surgical at Alcon in Fort Worth. “Rarely do we go to consumers.”
“This is a first-of-a-kind campaign,” he adds.
The collaboration with AARP is “for focused objectives aimed at driving awareness,” Mr. Leoni says, “to inform and educate about available options for cataract surgery, and how it can be tailored to individual needs.”
“AARP is critical because it reaches the target audience, 50-plus,” he adds, including people with cataracts who “have not been diagnosed” as well as “people who have been diagnosed but not treated yet.”
In the survey, only two out of five respondents who are cataract patients said they planned to have surgery in the next two years. Among the explanations for putting it off, 44 percent said their vision was “fine for now” and 14 percent said they were afraid, fearful or scared of the surgery.
“Vision health is a top priority” for older people, Mr. Leoni says, and they “are generally aware about cataracts but may not know about all the treatment options available today.” Of course, as the leader in cataract surgery, it is in Alcon’s interest to let them know more about surgical treatments.
That is reflected in a section of the survey devoted to responses from people who had cataract surgery. Four out of five said it was easier than they expected, according to the survey, and two out of three said it was not painful.
“The outcome is extremely positive, but there may be some hesitation,” Mr. Leoni says, especially among those who are “not aware how far cataract surgery has come” and how other conditions like presbyopia and astigmatism can also be treated during the surgery.
That perception is expressed in the “This is not your mother’s cataract surgery” headline.
“Twenty years ago, they didn’t have the advances in technology they have today,” says Kim Carpenter, vice president for account services at HCB Health.
“We want to educate the baby boomer population that when you’re diagnosed it’s not something to fear,” she adds, “and that cataract surgery is an opportunity to have better vision than you’ve had.”
Ms. Carpenter calls cataracts “one of those silent thieves” that can take a toll among today’s older people who are used to “an active life style.”
“This generation doesn’t accept the status quo,” she says, “and they’re taking better care of themselves” in areas like eye health.
The collaborative campaign represents “a great opportunity for Alcon and a great opportunity for AARP to educate its members,” she adds.
Patricia Lippe Davis, vice president for marketing at AARP Media Sales, notes that “as of next year, 100 percent of boomers will be 50” because the baby boom generation is defined as those Americans born from 1946 through 1964.
Ms. Davis traces the origins of the partnership between AARP and Alcon to an article, “Six Ways to Save Your Eyesight,” that appeared in the September/October 2011 issue of AARP The Magazine.
“There was an Alcon advertisement in that issue, and that ad was extremely successful for the company,” she recalls, which led to Alcon’s reaching out to AARP Media Sales to ask about potential joint initiatives in “the vision space.”
That produced the survey, which was conducted in April, followed by the campaign, which appears in the August/September issue of AARP The Magazine along with an article, “The Truth About Cataracts and Cataract Surgery.”
The growing appeal of content marketing is tempered by concerns about a blurring of the line between advertising and editorial content. In this instance, Ms. Davis says, there was an agreement that the content would be shared by Alcon and AARP but that Alcon “can have no influence on any editorial that was created.”
“This allowed us to create member value,” she adds, “letting us go deeper into a subject affecting our members.”
In addition to the AARP media properties, the campaign is appearing in publications like Golf, Guideposts, Ladies’ Home Journal, Prevention, Reader’s Digest, The Saturday Evening Post and Spry. The other online media outlets include AOL, Healthgrades and WebMD.
The campaign is scheduled to run through the end of the year. And “we’re already planning for 2014,” says Ms. Carpenter of HCB Health.
The intent is to introduce another creative approach in October and November, she adds, that will be “all about celebrating your independence, your freedom from cataracts,” reflecting how 90 percent of the respondents to the survey said their independence is “extremely important” to them.

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Cataract surgery comes of age

Waterfall surgery has progressed beyond anyone's expectations, consistent with Virginia Lolley, M.d., an ophthalmologist and waterfall surgeon at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB). 

lolley_cataract_surgery_s"the new measure of victory in waterfall surgery is 20/20 vision and no more glasses," said Lolley. "Not such a variety of years prior, patients would essentially be content with better vision, regardless of the fact that they still needed to wear glasses." 

The beginning of current waterfall surgery could be followed to 1949, when the first intraocular lens (IOL) was embedded in England, and there are references to treating waterfalls in old Roman compositions. 

The UAB Callahan Eye Hospital is turning 50 years of age in the not so distant future. The point when first constructed, it incorporated full-administration healing center spaces for overnight stays — for the most part
for waterfall patients.

lolley_cataract_surgery_s

"Forty-to-fifty years back, patients used the same amount as two weeks in the healing center accompanying waterfall surgery," said Lolley. "Presently, with new surgical procedures, with progressed intraocular lenses and even laser-guided exactness, the strategy is carried out as outpatient surgery. It's much more straightforward and more secure, and it brags exceptional effects." 

Lolley said generally patients can accomplish 20/20 vision after waterfall surgery now, and the technique can help treat optional issues, for example astigmatism and presbyopia through the utilization of specific Iol's. 

Laser surgery is the most current expansion to the tool stash. The Callahan Eye Hospital offers the Lensx® laser, which permits surgeons to perform waterfall surgery with laser exactness. Unlike accepted waterfall methods that utilize an edge to make cuts in the eye, the Lensx® laser uses a picture guided laser to make the entry points. This permits every waterfall surgery to be more exact than accepted strategies, attaining remarkably faultless and foreseeable outcomes. 

"It's an incredible new apparatus for surgery," said Lolley. "It aides alter every singular method by furnishing more precise estimation of the shapes of the eye, which thusly serves to guarantee the best conceivable consequence." 

A waterfall is a blurring of the lens in the eye that influences vision. Generally waterfalls are identified with maturing and are normal in seniors. The National Eye Institute reports that by age 80, more than 50% of all Americans either have a waterfall or have had waterfall surgery. 

The surgery includes two little cuts in the cornea to permit access for instruments. Surgeons use ultrasound vigor to split the overcast lens and uproot it by means of suction. The counterfeit IOL is then slipped into the eye, restoring ordinary or close typical vision. 

The need for waterfall surgery is set to press on to develop as the time of increased birth rates era ages, said Lolley, making a device like the Lensx® laser especially significant. 

"People born after the war need effects and won't settle for what their guardians' era had," she said. "Waterfall surgery has developed into an exceptionally solid and routine technique. Proceeded developments, for example lasers and new specific IOL's mean surprisingly better comes abo

Monday, September 2, 2013

Eye Care Centre 20th Birthday - 20,000th Cataract Surgery

A heading Auckland eye mind focus has denoted 20 years good to go by performing its 20,000th point of reference waterfall method. 

Auckland Eye establishing expert, Dr David Pendergrast, says the milestone surgery is a nod to how the practice and the ophthalmology business have advanced in the course of recent decades. 

The ascent of innovation has given Kiwis with eye conditions a more hopeful future than at any other time, he says. 

"Twenty years back, waterfalls were still normally being uprooted through an amazing vast wound. At that point the phacoemulsification system was presented, which permitted a much more modest wound. It is gentler and more exact and brings about additional fast recuperation of vision and less risk of spoiling," he says. "Notwithstanding, we have the approach of waterfall surgery utilizing a femtosecond (laser waterfall surgery) which, we accept, gives a further build in wellbeing for the eye and unoriginality of screen effects, consequently better results for the patient". 

The tests show that Wayan's cataracts are very mature, which means that they have reached a stage where they are allowing very little, if any, light to filter through. Wayan has only been in the clinic for 30 minutes but already it has been possible to determine that a simple operation to remove the cataracts could be performed before he goes home.

"More advanced intraocular lens materials now mean we can put lenses into children's eyes when they have a waterfall uprooted, although they needed to wear thick jug like glasses some time recently. This has implied an immense jump for how we can administration minimal ones, furnishing them with a greatly improved conclusion," says Dr Pendergrast. 

While waterfall surgeries make up the lion's share of the systems Auckland Eye performs, it additionally directs different others; incorporating lasik eye surgery, which it was the first to perform in Auckland. 

An alternate of Auckland Eye's establishing executives, Associate Professor Philip Polkinghorne, says a reach of different surgeries have been "affected greatly" by innovative headways, for example those which influence the elderly. 

"In the previous five years, unrivaled innovation and new prescriptions have empowered us to treat wet macular degeneration, which is fundamentally the start of a medicinal condition that normally influences more senior grown-ups and brings about misfortune of vision. Assuming that we get it in its tracks at this early arrange, we can stop further vision disability, although nothing could be carried out before – there was no trust," he says. 

Dr Rosser says that improvements in the more extensive eye mind industry have served to advertise the advancement of Auckland Eye. 

"We began as a cabin and now we're a blasting practice, which has developed from 4 to 14 surgeons, with more than double the counseling rooms and working theatres. We're still too enormous for our facility office, so we'll keep growing our premises not long from now," he says. 

"For each year we've been here we've helped a normal of 1500 Kiwis enhance or restore their visual perception through waterfall systems, and in the previous six years our waterfall surgeries have developed by 30%." 

Auckland Eye has pandered to consistently developing patient numbers by opening Oasis Surgical, a private theatre intricate, in late 2011. 

It is the main joined ophthalmic practice and surgical focus in Auckland to hold accreditation with Equip.