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Archive for the ‘Eye Sight & Vision’ Category

For World Sight Day, Horizon and Prevent Blindness Are Calling on the Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) Community to Put Vision First – Yahoo Finance

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

DUBLIN--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

-- Text the word EYE to 56512 to generate a donation from Horizon to Prevent Blindness to fund TED education --

Today, in support of World Sight Day, Horizon Therapeutics plc (HZNP) and Prevent Blindness launched a campaign that brings together the voices of the thyroid eye disease (TED) community to educate the public on how TED can damage vision and encourage people who are living with TED to put their vision first by sharing their experiences, monitoring their symptoms and finding the right doctor. World Sight Day is an internationally recognized awareness day designed to focus attention on blindness and vision impairment. This years dialogue emphasizes Vision First, with a call to the community to make vision a priority.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20191010005204/en/

Now through Oct. 31, 2019, Horizon will donate $1 (up to $10,000) to Prevent Blindness every time someone texts EYE to 56512. The campaign also invites the TED community to visit http://www.MyTEDStory.com to share how they have seen TED affect vision whether it be from experiencing it personally, or watching a friend, loved one or patient endure it. Select stories will be compiled and shared on social media to help people who are living with TED, healthcare professionals and the general public better understand the disease. Spotting the signs and symptoms of TED early can help decrease the chances of permanent eye damage. People who are at risk for TED, including those with Graves disease, are encouraged to pay attention to changes in their eyes such as pain, redness, light sensitivity, bulging, blurry vision and double vision and visit an ophthalmologist or oculoplastic surgeon to get an eye exam.

According to the World Health Organization, approximately 80 percent of all vision impairment across the globe is considered avoidable this statistic is both shocking and unacceptable, said Jeff Todd, president and CEO, Prevent Blindness. As a part of our sight-saving mission, we are thrilled to partner with Horizon to raise awareness about TED and inspire patients to actively monitor and successfully manage their symptoms.

TED is a serious, progressive and vision-threatening autoimmune disease.1,2 TED begins with active TED that may last for up to three years, after which damage to the eyes can be irreversible.1,3 Common symptoms include light sensitivity, eye grittiness, bulging eyes and double vision, among others all of which can reduce a persons independence, ability to work and self-confidence.1,4 As TED progresses, it can cause long-term, irreversible damage. Effective management of TED requires early diagnosis and active monitoring to identify the best opportunity for medical intervention.1 Patients who suspect that they may have TED should visit an eye specialist, such as an ophthalmologist or oculoplastic surgeon, to have their eyes examined. To learn more about TED, visit the new Prevent Blindness web resource and visit http://www.ThyroidEyes.com to sign up to receive information about TED.

At Horizon, weve made it our priority to better understand the needs of the TED community, said Matt Flesch, vice president, communications and patient advocacy, Horizon. Through conversations with patients, caregivers and healthcare professionals, weve heard how this disease can impair vision making it difficult to do the things we often take for granted, like drive, walk up or down stairs alone and read. By working together with Prevent Blindness, we hope to multiply our efforts and reach even more people with the TED education and support they need to speak up and be good advocates for their eye health.

To learn more about World Sight Day and other ways to get involved, visit the website for The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness.

About Prevent Blindness

Founded in 1908, Prevent Blindness is the nation's leading volunteer eye health and safety organization dedicated to fighting blindness and saving sight. Focused on promoting a continuum of vision care, Prevent Blindness touches the lives of millions of people each year through public and professional education, advocacy, certified vision screening and training, community and patient service programs and research. These services are made possible through the generous support of the American public. Together with a network of affiliates, Prevent Blindness is committed to eliminating preventable blindness in America. For more information, or to make a contribution to the sight-saving fund, call 1-800-331-2020. Or, visit us on the Web at preventblindness.org or facebook.com/preventblindness.

Story continues

About Horizon

Horizon is focused on researching, developing and commercializing medicines that address critical needs for people impacted by rare and rheumatic diseases. Our pipeline is purposeful: we apply scientific expertise and courage to bring clinically meaningful therapies to patients. We believe science and compassion must work together to transform lives. For more information on how we go to incredible lengths to impact lives, please visit http://www.horizontherapeutics.com, follow us @HorizonNews on Twitter, like us on Facebook or explore career opportunities on LinkedIn.

References

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20191010005204/en/

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For World Sight Day, Horizon and Prevent Blindness Are Calling on the Thyroid Eye Disease (TED) Community to Put Vision First - Yahoo Finance

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Pearle Vision and OneSight Launch ABSee Program to Provide Quality Eye Care to School-age Children in Need – Franchising.com

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

By: Pearle Vision | 1Shares 16Reads

October 10, 2019 // Franchising.com // MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. - Pearle Vision and OneSight understand that access to high quality eye care is critical to help children unlock their true potential and achieve their dreams. Thats why they have come together to launch a new program, ABSee, powered by Pearle Vision and OneSight. ABSee will provide no-cost access to eye care and corrective eyewear to children in need in neighborhoods across North America where Pearle Vision EyeCare Centers are located.

Today, on World Sight Day, volunteers from Pearle Vision, one of the largest optical retailers in North America, and OneSight, a global vision care nonprofit, will work together to provide eye exams and glasses to hundreds of students at Earle Brown Elementary School in Brooklyn Center, Minn., at the first of 10 planned vision care clinics. World Sight Day, coordinated by The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness, is held annually on the second Thursday in October to focus global attention on blindness and vision impairment.

Over the next 12 months, ABSee will bring vision care clinics to cities from Atlanta to Seattle and from Toronto to Puerto Rico. At these clinics, volunteers will conduct vision tests and optometrists will perform eye exams on board a state-of-the-art mobile vision unit.

Pearle Vision has been a long-time supporter of OneSight, and we are thrilled to bring our relationship to the next level with ABSee, said Alex Wilkes, General Manager of Pearle Vision. We know that getting a pair of glasses can be life-changing for a child with a vision problem. With ABSee, we are underscoring our longstanding commitment to caring about the people behind the eyes, ensuring that every child, especially those with financial need, has access to quality eye care and corrective eyewear.

One in four school-age children in the U.S. has an undiagnosed vision care problem, according to the American Optometric Association. Because 80 percent of learning is visual for children, it can become a challenge for students to achieve their full potential in school and in life.

Pearle Vision was founded by Dr. Stanley Pearle, whose mandate was, Take care of the people. Pearle Vision has long prided itself on doing just that, inspiring trust in its patients and adopting the now-iconic slogan, Nobody cares for eyes more than Pearle.

Wilkes said, Every day, we see patients in our EyeCare Centers who have vision care needs, and we are there to help them see more clearly. But if we truly are the brand that cares for eyes more than anyone else, we also have an obligation to improve the lives of the community outside our doors, and especially for the most vulnerable members of that community. ABSee provides an excellent opportunity for us to do that.

OneSight is proud to partner with Pearle Vision to bring clear sight to students in need across our local communities, said K-T Overbey, OneSight President and Executive Director. We believe everyone deserves access to clear sight and by working together, we can help students see and learn to their potential this school year and beyond.

In addition to Pearle Visions corporate support for ABSee, patients visiting EyeCare Centers will be invited to support the program.

For more information about ABSee, please visit pearlevision.com/ABSee.

Editors note: ABSee is pronounced A-B-C.

Pearle Vision was founded in 1961 by Dr. Stanley Pearle, who began the concept of one-stop, total eye care with the opening of the Pearle Vision Center in Savannah, Ga. Dr. Pearle combined complete eye exams with an extensive selection of eyewear. In 1981, Pearle Vision began offering franchise opportunities to select doctors and opticians. Today, with more than 500 EyeCare Centers located throughout the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico, Pearle Vision is built around a doctor-centered business model with a primary focus to deliver genuine eye care to patients and become the neighborhood trusted source for all their eye care and eye wear needs. Pearle Vision is owned by Luxottica, a leader in premium fashion, luxury and sports eyewear. For more information, visit PearleVision.com. To learn more about the Pearle Vision franchise opportunity, visit ownapearlevision.com or call 1-800-PEARLE-1.

OneSight is the leading global nonprofit organization dedicated to bringing access to an eye exam and glasses to the 1.1 billion people who have no way to get them. We have a proven model that provides permanent access to vision care and glasses and we are pioneering new ways to deliver quality vision care to the most remote communities. We believe one's location and circumstances should not stand in the way of one's potential. Our goal is to create a world where lack of access to vision care is no longer a barrier to human achievement, and every donation gets us one step closer to making that world a reality. For more information, visit http://www.onesight.org.

Emily Ryaneryan@luxotticaretail.com513.265.9255

SOURCE Pearle Vision

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6 Daily Habits That Are Probably Affecting Your Eyesight, According To An Optometrist – mindbodygreen.com

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

Since your eyes are organs, anything you put in your body can either help or harm them (smoking, of course, is an obvious example). A diet that increases your risk or high blood pressure, cholesterol, and diabetes all affect your eyes too, according to Hamada.

To keep your peepers healthy, Hamada suggests getting some key vitamins and nutrients: "Vitamins A, C, E, and B12 help combat free radicals and help protect the retina. Lutein in leafy greens also protects the retina. And anti-inflammatories like clean fish oil has also been proven to reduce dry eye in some individuals," she says.

5. Sleeping with makeup on.

You don't need us to tell you this one, but here's why it's a problem: "When eye makeup like mascara gets into the corneathe front part of the eyethat increases the chances of getting a corneal infection or a scratch," says Hamada.

6. Skipping your eye exams.

When it comes to the health of your eyes over your lifetime, this is a must. Simply put, "As we get older, like everything else, our eyes age," says Hamada. Many of vision's aging processes like cataracts or dry eyes can be diagnosed and treated without affecting vision and quality of life over time," she says. "Nothing against the dentists, but we can get false teethwe only have two eyes, and we can't replace our vision."

For more information about eye health and vision care, visit lenscrafters.com.

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Eyes Set on Efficient Vision Care to Those in Need – TheJambar.com

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

By Frances Clause

When Blessing Offor, season seven finalist on The Voice, had the opportunity to share his music and inspirational story at the forth Annual Eye Ball of the Mahoning Valley, he accepted.

Born in Nigeria with congenital glaucoma in his left eye and an accident that caused his retina to detach in his right eye at 10 years old, Offor has been blind since childhood.

Despite this, he has been performing for most of his life and has wowed audiences, including guests who attended the Eye Ball in the DeYor Performing Arts Center on Saturday.

For me, music has been like a saving grace and something I grew with in some difficult times, Offor said while playing the piano on stage. Work is work, but when its something you have a passion for, you do something you love, which feels infinitely better.

Sight for All United hosts this fundraising event to create support and awareness for the organizations mission to help people in the Valley reach their visual potential.

Stephanie Champlin of Eye Care Associates said the adversity Offor has faced and his ability to overcome it made him the perfect guest artist for the Eye Ball to display its importance to the Valley.

[The Eye Ball] helps give us funds to provide surgery, eye exams and glasses for children and adults, she said. Through donations, [Sight for All United] has been able to serve over 800 people in the tri-county community.

Since 2016, Sight for All Uniteds programs have enabled community members in need to receive glasses for $10 a pair and developed city school vision programs that include follow-up eye exams.

For Offor, this type of care he needed didnt come so quickly when he lived in Nigeria.

No one else in my family had glaucoma or any other eye condition, so when my dad figured this out, he went to a doctor, Offor said. [The doctor] said, Mr. Offor, I can fix your sons eye condition if you give me $1 million American dollars.

Offors only choice was to leave Nigeria and come to the U.S. Although this was difficult for his family, Offor said it was the best decision they could have made for him.

[Medical professionals in the U.S.] did for me what Sight for All does for a lot of kids, which is making it possible for us to get things that we couldnt have gotten on our own, he said.

Through the collaboration of 40 eye doctors in the Valley and generous donations, care continues to be efficiently delivered to those in need. Youngstown State University students have also stepped in to help with the cause.

Saidah Yusuf, a senior biology major, has served as president of Students for Sight on campus for two years and interns for Sight for All United. These organizations work together, with students volunteering at other events Sight for All United plans.

The goal is to raise awareness to the community about vision issues that not many people know about, Yusuf said. A lot of people need injections, cataract surgeries and medications, so we hope to raise funds for that [on campus.]

To donate to Sight for All Uniteds $100,000 goal, visit donate.onecause.com/sfa/home.

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Rockland Center for the Arts increases accessibility of the arts for the blind and low-vision art enthusiasts in a new exhibition sponsored by Crystal…

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

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Visions of Awareness, is an exhibit exploring VISION and seeing creatively. Vision does not solely rely on the function of our eyes: sight starts in the brain as an idea or thought. The exhibit is on view October 13 through November 24, 2019. An artists reception will be held on Sunday, October 20 from 2-5 p.m. Please see the attached for additional related programming.

This October is Vision Awareness Month. This exhibit explores the human need for imagery through art by legally blind and low vision artists as well as tactile sighted artists. The human brain is wired for optical input, for visualization. Even when the optic nerve is not getting input, the brain would continue creating images. Why does a blind person take photographs? Further why would he want images? According to Evgen Bavcar ofThe Seeing with Photography Collective, One cant belong to this world if one cannot imagine it in his own way. When a blind person says I imagine, it means he too has an inner representation of external realities. Vision, even in the absence of sight, is a need, above all, to visualize.

What role can art play in bringing awareness of those with physical limitations, how they interact with the world, and the insights they can bring from their perspectives? The unsighted are unbound by assumptions of sight. According to Mina Levent, the Director of Art Education for the Blind and the Art Beyond Sight Institute in New York, People are starting to accept the fact that art and imagery are mental and not visual.The heart of the creative work has nothing to do with sight. Artists choices are internal.

For a blind person, making a photograph is a choice, a radical choice, a political move. Doing so lays claim to the visual world and forces a reevaluation of ideas about blindness. People will ask how can they do this if they cant see anything? Most believe it is unthinkable. The image starts in the brain through mental imagery deep in the mind. The unsighted artist is not bound by sighted assumptions. These acts of creative image-making additionally render the blind artists from The Seeing with Photography Collective more visible to the sighted, an important matter for such a small and marginalized minority.

Sidewalk Sagas, wire sculptures composed of mild steel wire by painter and sculptorBusser Howell. The Sidewalk Sagas series are three-dimensional narratives revealing the influence of modern technology on metropolitan life, the anxieties of todays city dweller, and the mania associated with cellphones which leads to a dangerous cyber-oblivion. Howell claims the result is a potent mixture of aggression, sidewalk rage, amnesia, and a sense of entitlement that too many pedestrians seem to embrace.

In35thStreet and Lexington Avenue, the sculpture reveals panoramic dramas occurring on the north side of the narrow sidewalk of 35thStreet: with houses and their stoops on one side and trees and tree guards on the curb, the blind man and his guide dog try to move through all the dog walkers who make no effort to contain their pets, their leashes fully extended; a couple drinking coffee and sharing gossip are oblivious to their three little barking dogs that will jump between the feet of the blind man causing him to trip on the leash while the dogs distract his service animal; a person is texting while his poodle poops against the tree; and at the end of the block, a woman is deeply involved on her phone while her dog at the end of its leash joins in the mayhem. Each sculpture depicts a moment in time just prior to the collisions and run-ins that are so common to part of the daily fabric of walking the sidewalks of New York City using a guide dog. They depict the sense of entitlement of so many pedestrians either on their phones or simply feeling they have the right of way is something emblematic of this cyber age. People too frequently act as if cyberspace is real and what is happening around them is the fantasy.

Kenn Kotarauses Braille in his paintings. Through these works, he explores the anthropologic quality of Braille. Delving into the essence of the system, where everything is pared down to subtle dots, he thinks of what it is like to possess perfect vision, yet the junction of ones philosophies and ideologies creates impairment. According to Mr Kotara When we cant see beyond our own ideas, we accept them as sufficient. WhatIfwe were to shift, even slightly? Might a glimmer recalibrate our optics, our perceptions? When light catches that little lip of the Braille surface, it creates a shadow effect. It can remind one of basic hieroglyphics, language as image. Poems or thoughts are included in bas-relief Braille over his abstract paintings which are reminiscent of his native Louisiana rivers, marshlands and lush vegetation.

Other artwork in the exhibit will include three-dimensional pieces to touch:Simone Kestelmanstextural landmark buildings created as glass sculptures;Alice Mizrachisrendering of one of the exhibit photographs from The Seeing with Photography Collective.

RoCAs encourages visitors to think of art as a form of healing for the mind, body and spirit in this fast-paced, technology-driven world we live in. Through exhibitions that feature artists who have overcome challenges in their own lives, we hope to provide inspiration for others.Visions of Awarenessis more than an art exhibition, it is considered a service to the community. RoCA strives to create inclusiveness in the arts, a place where patrons who are blind can just be patrons. Sleep shades will be available for sighted patrons so they have a chance to experience art through their other senses. RoCA hopes to increase the accessibility for those of low-vision and legally blind through audio recordings about the artwork, with equipment powered byQuiet Eventshttps://quietevents.com.

RoCAs other two exhibits opening at the same time include:Endless Journey, an exhibit of one mans journey to inform the world of Cambodias experiences through art and heal wounds.Chanthou Oeur,also known as Chakra Oeur, has spanned the globe utilizing his extraordinary multi talents.As a refugee encamped by the Khmer Rouge, he shares his experiences and enduring spirit with those who are willing to see and hear.The Body Reconfigured, an exhibit of one Vietnam Veterans journey creating art to navigate through PTSD.Howard Millersbeautiful compositions resemble parts of the body in layered abstract compositions. Millers situation is representative of many veterans of war. Sometimes soldiers cannot verbally say what the trauma is but they can express it through art where they are removed in a way where they are shielded, safe and protected to express it. This reintegrates the brain and the healing process begins.

RoCA invites the public to attend the artists Opening Reception on Sunday, October 20, 2-5 p.m. Visions of Awarenessis on view Oct. 13 Nov. 24, free to the general public. For more information contact: Rockland Center for the Arts, 845-358-0877,info@rocklandartcenter.orgor visitwww.rocklandartcenter.org. Rockland Center for the Arts is located at 27 S Greenbush Rd., West Nyack. Regular hours are: Mon-Fri 10-4; Sat and Sun 1-4pm.

Exhibition Related Programming:

Oct. 16 White Cane Day

RoCA is partnering with The Association for the Visually Impaired (AVI), which will hold its White Cane Day to celebrate the independence the visually impaired can derive from using a White Cane. The event will be held Oct. 16at Dominican College in the Hennessey Center from 9 a.m. 1 p.m. Artist Busser Howell, from RoCAs Visions of Awareness Exhibit, will be the inspirational speaker at AVIs White Cane Day on learning to deal with blindness and continuing on with life. AVI provides Functional Vision Services to all ages as well as providing comprehensive vision rehabilitation services and programs for workforce development and placement at no costs. AVI provides training to ensure independence and the ability to live a healthy and meaningful lifestyle within the community and within the home. For more information call 845-574-4950.

Oct. 21 & Nov. 4 Free Eye Exams

Visions of Awareness and related programs are generously funded by Crystal Run Healthcare. Crystal Run will be holding a free Vision Lab @ RoCA to test your eyes as a preservation for your vision on Monday, Oct. 21 and Monday, Nov. 4 from 12 4 p.m. To schedule a 15 minute appointment call 845-358-0877. Drop-ins are welcome.

Nov. 14Artists Talk

RoCA will present an Artists Talk with Mark Andres of The Seeing with Photography Collective and Busser Howell at 7 p.m. The artists will talk about how their vision impairment has brought a deeper mental imagery of their work, their inspiration and their pieces in the exhibit. Free to the public.

Nov. 16 Music Sessions @ RoCA

A.J. Crocewill perform on Saturday, Nov. 16at 7:30 p.m. A.J., son ofJim Croce, went blind at age four, due to horrific physical abuse from his mothers boyfriend, after his father died. A.J. was hospitalized for half a year and was totally blind in both eyes for six years. It was during this time he started playing piano, inspired by blind pianistsRay CharlesandStevie Wonder. Croce, regained some sight in his left eye when he ten. As a virtuoso piano player, Croce toured with B.B. King and Ray Charles before reaching the age of 21.

A.J. will performCroce Plays Croce, its a special night of music featuring a complete set of classics from his late father, Jim Croce, some of A.J.s own tunes, and songs that influenced both him and his father. A.J.s 25 year career as a pianist, songwriter and singer has produced nine albums, 17 Top 20 singles and he has performed on The Late Show, The Tonight Show, The Today Show, CNN, MTV & VH1.

About the Exhibiting Artists:

The Seeing with Photography Collective

The Seeing with Photography Collective is a group of photographers based in New York City who are visually impaired, low-vision sighted and totally blind. Coming from diverse backgrounds and life experiences, they share an awareness of sight loss, along with the determination to dialogue and integrate imagery into a more universal context. Sighted assistants focus and compose the cameras frame directed by the blind artist. Then, in a darkened room, they leave the cameras shutter open as they slowly paint the subject with a small flashlight creating human-scale exposures, lasting many minutes, rather than the instant shutter click typically heard. Luminous distortions, blurred or glowing forms result from the technique.

The Collective uses two other essential tools for the creation of the photographs. The first is the light switch, and the second is a flashlight. What would make more intuitive sense for a visually impaired photographer than taking pictures in the dark? Their photographs are made by the movement of the subjects bodies as they paint the subjects with hand-held lights.

Busser Howell

At the age of fifteen, Busser Howell lost 98 percent of his vision. At the age of 40 he lost the remaining 2 percent. Prior to being a professional artist, in NYC, he was a partner for twenty-four years in an interior design and restoration business.

Howell is also a painter, who works in richly textured, large-scale, monochromatic surfaces. His objective is to reduce his work to its minimal form while still maintaining a strength of design, color, and form. These large geometric pieces are worked in heavy impastos of acrylic paint. Paints in his studio are arranged by color on a set of shelves. Howell starts a painting by walking into his studio, and meditating. He sees his art in his mind and uses his mind the way a sighted artist might use a sketch pad, working on various ideas and editing ideas to see how it will change the idea. With brushes and canvas at hand, he allows the piece to evolve. Color appears in his mind and he moves intuitively on the canvas, almost like a channel. Often the paint is applied by hand, and the irregular lines are made with his fingers, making the works tactile and the most physically involved works he produces.

Howell has exhibited at Hunt Morgan Museum, Kentucky; the Dayton Art Institute, Ohio; the Museum of the Permian Basin, Texas; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia; and the collection of the New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut. He has given discussions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and is the author of the book20/20 Blindsight.Blindsightis an interview with other blind artists unfolding individual point of view by examining the concepts of creativity, perception, touch and accessibility. Howell engages the vibrant, boundless minds of fifteen visually impaired artists. It is the artists telling their story, and an extraordinary look into a world never before fully understood.

Kenn Kotara

Kenn Kotara was is a Louisiana native living and working in North Carolina. As a painter and educator he uses Braille as an anthropologic quality in his work. Kotaras work has been exhibited at such venues of the Paul and Lulu Hilliard University Art Museum, Univ. of LA, Lafayette, LA; Flander Gallery, Raleigh, NC; and Sandler Hudson Gallery, Atlanta, GA.

Kotaras work is in the public collections of Asheville Art Museum, NC, Elon University, Elon, NC, Louisiana State Museum, Baton Rouge, LA, Piedmont Triad International Airport, Greensboro/Winston-Salem/High Point, NC, U.S. Embassy, Kingston, Jamaica. Corporate collections with his work include: Amber Bay Resort, Dalian China, Bellagio, Las Vegas, ClearChoice Management Services, LLC, Tampa, FL, GE Power Systems, Atlanta, Gold Strike Casino, MS, Park Hyatt Hotel, Washington, DC Sumisho, Tokyo, Japan and Star City Casino, Penthouse Suites, Sydney, Australia.

Simone Kestelman

Simone Kestelman is a Brazilian born sculptor and multi-media artist living in New York. Kestelman wants to find other ways of bridging verbal and nonverbal means of communication, and of integrating different media to produce work that addresses the disabled and plight of females. She often uses text to help integrate image and concept, and interactive elements to motivate viewers, especially children and the sense-impaired, to respond and express themselves.

Kestelman has exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Thessaloniki, Greece, the United Nations, MOCA, Calgary, Canada, A Hebraica Gallery, San Paulo, Brazil and SCOPE Arts NY,

Alice Mizrachi

Alice Mizrachi is a NY based interdisciplinary artist and educator working in the mediums of painting, murals and installation. As an arts educator for twenty years, she has worked for organizations including BRIC Arts, The Laundromat Project and The Studio Museum in Harlem. She has an extensive body of work as a muralist. Mizrachis work has been featured in exhibitions at the Museum of the City of New York, The National Museum of Women in the Arts, the United Nations and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Washington, DC. She has been commissioned as a mural artist for projects in Amsterdam, Berlin, Tel Aviv and across the United States.

art, creative, october, ROCA, visions of awareness

Rockland Center for the Arts increases accessibility of the arts for the blind and low-vision art enthusiasts in a new exhibition sponsored by Crystal Run Healthcare added by rctadmin on October 10, 2019View all posts by rctadmin

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LLamasoft Partners with Global Eye Bank, Eversight – Business Wire

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

ANN ARBOR, Mich.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--LLamasoft, the leading provider of enterprise supply chain design and decision-making solutions, is proud to announce its partnership with Eversight, a nonprofit organization dedicated to restoring sight and preventing blindness through eye donation, corneal transplantation and vision research. Eversight will utilize LLamasofts solutions to make data-driven decisions that more accurately predict the future need for and availability of donated eye tissue and how to most efficiently design a delivery network to provide corneas to transplant recipients in need.

Eversight is one of the largest eye banks in the world and offers numerous services beyond traditional eye banking. The organization recovers, evaluates and delivers donated eye tissue for transplantation, supports research into the causes and cures of blinding eye conditions, promotes donation awareness through public and professional education and provides humanitarian aid to people around the world in need of sight-restoring therapies. By building a complete model of its end-to-end supply chain with LLamasoft, Eversight can more easily identify operational inefficiencies and make recommended improvements as well as evaluate contingency plans based on real-world variables that impact eye donation and transplantation. Testing and planning for various scenarios ensures that the most effective process is in place for tissue recovery, processing and delivery, and that tissue is available to surgeons and their patients when the need arises.

Eversight helps restore vision to more than 8,000 people through corneal transplantation every year, but there is more work to be done, said Ryan Simmons, Clinical Services Director at Eversight. To treat and one day eliminate preventable blindness, Eversight is collaborating with innovative partners who share our commitment to making vision a reality for people around the world. LLamasofts supply chain expertise, coupled with the insights gleaned from the data now available at our fingertips, will be invaluable in making smarter and faster decisions that ultimately will allow us to achieve more with the precious gift of sight.

This partnership enables LLamasoft to reach its commitment to positively impact 100 million lives by 2022. Eighty-nine percent of vision-impaired people live in low- and middle-income countries. Eversight is committed to meeting the need for delivery of tissues in countries where sight-restoring corneal transplant procedures would otherwise be completely unavailable, including the Middle East, Pakistan and South Korea. With LLamasofts technology identifying opportunities for cost savings, Eversight is well positioned to serve more patients in need, increase capacity to reach more corneal surgeons and effectively send more tissue overseas.

As with any transplant, time is of the essence in recovering eye tissue. In a matter of days, with Eversights help, someone who was once blind can begin to enjoy a life of sight, said Ryan Purcell, Director, Global Impact Team at LLamasoft. Eversights dedication to restoring sight and preventing blindness is truly remarkable. Assisting them in finding more effective and efficient ways to plan for, recover and deliver tissue so that more recipients can be supported is fulfilling work for our Global Impact Team. We are excited to have the opportunity to positively impact more people around the world through this collaboration.

For more information on this partnership, join Eversight in San Francisco at the Cornea and Eye Banking Forum October 11 and AAO 2019, the American Academy of Ophthalmologys annual meeting, October 12-15.

About LLamasoft, Inc.

Over 750 of the worlds most innovative companies across multiple industries rely on LLamasoft to answer complex supply chain questions. Powered by advanced analytics, LLamasoft technology helps business leaders design operational strategies to achieve profitability and growth goals. The company creates a true end-to-end view of global supply chains to enable decisions among strategic, tactical and operational time horizons. Its customers have identified more than $13B in value relying on insights from LLamasofts solutions. To reach its goal to positively impact 100 million lives by 2022, LLamasoft has partnered with humanitarian organizations, government entities and the World Economic Forum, and used its solutions to design and optimize health supply chains increase overall efficiency and reach more individuals in need.

About Eversight

Eversight is nonprofit organization with a mission to restore sight and prevent blindness through the healing power of donation, transplantation and research. The Eversight network is responsible for recovering, evaluating and providing human eye tissue for transplantation; supporting research into the causes and cures of blinding eye conditions; promoting donation awareness through public and professional education; and providing humanitarian aid to people around the world in need of corneal transplantation. Operating in Connecticut, Illinois, Michigan, New Jersey, Ohio and South Korea, Eversight works in collaboration with surgeons, researchers, academic medical centers and eye banks across the United States and abroad. For more information, visit eversightvision.org.

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On World Sight Day, Allergan Launches National Campaign to Raise Awareness of the Toll Glaucoma Takes on Everyday Living – Yahoo Finance

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

-- Allergan launches interactive website, MyGlaucoma.com, to shed light on the burden of the disease, provide patient and caregiver perspectives and resources to help --

-- New survey in collaboration with Glaucoma Research Foundation reveals people with glaucoma understand the toll of the disease but may not take it as seriously as they should --

DUBLIN, Oct. 10, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Allergan plc (AGN), a leading global pharmaceutical company with more than 70 years of heritage in eye care, today announced a national education campaign called My Glaucoma. The campaign is designed to help people understand the burden of living with glaucoma and empower those with the disease and their caregivers to feel comfortable speaking with their doctor about a treatment regimen that fits their lifestyle. The resources available on http://www.MyGlaucoma.com are supported by a new survey of patients living with glaucoma and eye doctors, conducted in collaboration with Glaucoma Research Foundation (GRF), that found more than 75 percent of patients worry about vision loss because of the disease, but nearly half consider glaucoma to be only somewhat or not serious. In fact, research published by the American Journal of Ophthalmology suggests that 27 percent of patients with glaucoma are estimated to go blind in one eye over a 10-year period.

Experience the interactive Multichannel News Release here: https://www.multivu.com/players/English/8584151-allergan-my-glaucoma-world-sight-day/

"Glaucoma is clearly a national health issue and one that is overlooked in favor of other diseases perceived as more critical. Given the potential for vision loss, it is increasingly important that we highlight the seriousness of glaucoma, the emotional toll it takes on those living with the disease every day and the importance of doctor-patient communication," said Thomas M. Brunner, President and CEO, Glaucoma Research Foundation. "As we mark this year's World Sight Day, we are proud to partner with Allergan to magnify this data for the general public and offer resources that help preserve people's sight."

"Our perception of glaucoma must change from one that characterizes the disease as 'part of getting old' to one that reinforces its severity and the importance of active treatment," said Ramin Valian, Vice President, Allergan Interventional Glaucoma. "Our interactive website and partnership with the eye care community and Glaucoma Research Foundation is a major step forward in ensuring patients and their caregivers feel comfortable and confident taking greater control of their glaucoma in the doctor's office and at home."

As a leader in eye care, Allergan sought to listen to the voices of patients with glaucoma and eye care professionals to put together meaningful resources that everyone living with glaucoma can benefit from. The interactive website http://www.MyGlaucoma.com offers access to videos that include perspectives from patients living with glaucoma and their caregivers, more information from the survey and patient resources, such as a conversation guide and facts about glaucoma diagnosis and treatment.

"More than 3 million Americans are estimated to be living with glaucoma. As such, it is vital patients keep an open-line of communication with their eye doctors about struggles they may be having with their glaucoma and treatment routine, as well as what they may be experiencing emotionally," said Sahar Bedrood, M.D., Ph.D., Glaucoma Specialist at Acuity Eye Group and Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology. "A patient should not hold back discussing their challenges, as every piece of information can be important to customize their care and lessen the burden of the disease."

About the SurveyIn an online survey commissioned by Allergan, in collaboration with Glaucoma Research Foundation, of 500 glaucoma patients and 100 eye doctors in the United States, results showed that glaucoma takes a significant emotional toll on people with the disease, as 4 in 5 glaucoma patients admit that they worry about how their lifestyle will change as a result of the disease. Additionally, there is a need for a more proactive two-way dialogue between eye care doctors and patients, especially around treatment, as patients stated current treatment options cause disruption in their lives. Almost 9 in 10 eye doctors wish their patients would take their medication as prescribed. Specifically, 79 percent want their patients to tell them if they're struggling with it.

Story continues

About GlaucomaGlaucoma is one of the primary causes of irreversible vision loss and blindness. An estimated 70 million people globally are living with glaucoma. This progressive disease is characterized by elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). Uncontrolled, elevated IOP causes damage to the optic nerve and loss of vision. Reduction of elevated IOP is the only proven way to slow the progression of vision loss associated with glaucoma.

Current treatments to lower IOP include topical medications (eye drops), laser trabeculoplasty, minimally invasive glaucoma surgery and incisional surgery. Eye drop medications are the standard first-line treatment for open-angle glaucoma, the most common form, but low patient adherence to these medications is common up to 80 percent of patients are not using topical medications as prescribed. Poor adherence to glaucoma medication could result in disease progression and vision loss. According to a study published by the American Academy of Ophthalmology, up to 59 percent of patients on treatment for glaucoma continue to progress, meaning they experience vision loss and damage to the optic nerve.

About Allergan Eye CareAs a leader in eye care, Allergan has discovered, developed, and delivered some of the most innovative products in the industry for more than 70 years. Allergan has launched over 125 eye care products and invested billions of dollars in new treatments for the most prevalent eye conditions including glaucoma, ocular surface disease, and retinal diseases such as diabetic macular edema and retinal vein occlusion. Our eye care pipeline includes 13 additional agents for multiple ocular conditions.

Our commitment to the well-being of patients is also reflected in social responsibility. Allergan, The Allergan Foundation and The Allergan International Foundation support more than 150 organizations around the world working to improve lives and communities. We remain steadfast in helping eye care providers deliver the best in patient care through innovative products and outreach programs.

About Allergan plcAllergan plc (AGN), headquartered in Dublin, Ireland, is a global pharmaceutical leader focused on developing, manufacturing and commercializing branded pharmaceutical, device, biologic, surgical and regenerative medicine products for patients around the world. Allergan markets a portfolio of leading brands and best-in-class products primarily focused on four key therapeutic areas including medical aesthetics, eye care, central nervous system and gastroenterology. As part of its approach to delivering innovation for better patient care, Allergan has built one of the broadest pharmaceutical and device research and development pipelines in the industry.

With colleagues and commercial operations located in approximately 100 countries, Allergan is committed to working with physicians, healthcare providers and patients to deliver innovative and meaningful treatments that help people around the world live longer, healthier lives every day.

For more information, visit Allergan's website at http://www.Allergan.com.

Forward-Looking StatementStatements contained in this press release that refer to future events or other non-historical facts are forward-looking statements that reflect Allergan's current perspective on existing trends and information as of the date of this release. Actual results may differ materially from Allergan's current expectations depending upon a number of factors affecting Allergan's business. These factors include, among others, the difficulty of predicting the timing or outcome of FDA approvals or actions, if any; the impact of competitive products and pricing; market acceptance of and continued demand for Allergan's products; the impact of uncertainty around timing of generic entry related to key products, including RESTASIS, on our financial results; risks associated with divestitures, acquisitions, mergers and joint ventures; risks related to impairments; uncertainty associated with financial projections, projected cost reductions, projected debt reduction, projected synergies, restructurings, increased costs, and adverse tax consequences; difficulties or delays in manufacturing; and other risks and uncertainties detailed in Allergan's periodic public filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including but not limited to Allergan's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2018 and Allergan's Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the period ended June 30, 2019. Except as expressly required by law, Allergan disclaims any intent or obligation to update these forward-looking statements.

CONTACTS: Allergan: Investors:Manisha Narasimhan, PhD (862) 261-7162

Media: Lisa Brown (862) 261-7320

Lisa Kim(714) 246-3843

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On World Sight Day, Allergan Launches National Campaign to Raise Awareness of the Toll Glaucoma Takes on Everyday Living - Yahoo Finance

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Have You Ever Heard of Nystagmus? – Yahoo Lifestyle

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

Spell check doesnt recognize the word nystagmus. Neither do most people when I explain that its the reason why my eyeballs constantly shift from side to side, sometimes slightly wobbling, sometimes darting rapidly.

As a person with albinism, I was born with congenital nystagmus and the resulting weak eyesight. Whenever I get into candid conversations about my vision, the question Im asked most often is, Does your whole world keep shifting about too, because of the way your eyes move?

Thankfully, it doesnt. But focusing on anything specific is pretty difficult. Thats why I cant recognize faces easily, especially from a distance or within a crowd. Reading signs whether in the streets, shopping malls, or at airports, train and bus stations is impossible, as is deciphering menus printed on walls behind the counter at cafes and restaurants.

Technology helps. I click photos of signage or text on my phone and zoom in to make better sense of the world around me. Im extremely fortunate to have vision thats considerably better on the ocular spectrum of people with some form of albinism. And I acknowledge that Ive had things a lot easier because of a privileged background with access to resources and the support and help of family and friends.

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Nonetheless, nystagmus slows me down. Just like I zoom in on the phone screen, I need to zoom in on get awkwardly close to everything in my physical reality too, whether its a book Im reading, food Im enjoying, an ATM Im withdrawing cash from, or the laptop I work on as a digital nomad reaching for my dreams of traveling the world. Text-to-speech is among my favorite inventions and I saved up to recently splurge on a MacBook Pro for the way its so simple to have any text read out loud to me at the tap of a button, and for the unrivaled trackpad that makes zooming in and out a breeze.

I often get quizzical looks from people who dont immediately understand why I hold my phone screen so close or hunch over my laptop when working, but Im all too used to being stared at and it doesnt make me as uncomfortable as it once did when I was still an anxious and timid teenager.

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People often overlook that living with any kind of different abilities often leads to other issues like low self-esteem, anxiety or depression. Growing up, I have had to work through my fair share of inner turmoil to accept myself and not let my eyesight or my albinism define me.

As a brown person who is whiter than most Caucasians and with hair that a boy I liked once told me is described as strawberry blond, Ive dealt with unwanted attention and probing personal questions all my life. Ive grown to be more amused than offended by the confusion that my Indian identity causes, particularly when I hand over my passport for scrutiny at airports or hotels.

You dont look Indian, is something Ive heard all my life, most of the time with a hint of a positive connotation like its a good thing. And its always strange to experience white privilege when Im not really white Im often treated like a foreigner in my own country.

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My appearance has ceased to bother me as much as it did when I was younger, but thats not to say I dont get self-conscious. I often find it uncomfortable to hold eye contact and still feel wracked with shame when accused of not smiling or waving back at someone or failing to understand their gestures. I never pre-book rides from airports in foreign cities because I know Id never be able to find my name on a placard in a crowd of strangers.

Sometimes, I can sense people pitying me, particularly when I share that I cant drive, and they even go on to recommend ophthalmologists who helped someone they know. Why dont you just get surgery? Im asked. As if Id never have thought to look into this option myself.

Even with all the advances in medical science, there is still no reliable fix for nystagmus and even if there was, Im not entirely sure Id jump at the chance of getting my eyes operated on. Ive made my peace with living with nystagmus, using public transport and thanks to technology once again Uber. I take heart in the fact that this way of getting around is also better for the environment.

I grew up feeling it wasnt fair how I couldnt see as well as everyone around me, how I had to sit right up front in class throughout school and still not be able to read the board, and how I couldnt play ball sports to save my life. But all these years later, cultivating a sense ofgratitude has changed my perspective.

I am deeply appreciativefor the wonderful support network I have and the ways in which Ive been able to reach for my dreams. Im grateful for my job and the ways technology helps me out, and I am hopeful that companies and governments will invest more and more in improving accessibility for a truly inclusive world.

There are still moments of frustration when I think if it wasnt for my eyesight, perhaps I would have achieved a lot more than I have so far, but I refuse to wallow in such negativity. I refuse to make my nystagmus an excuse for not going after my dreams. Just like with everything else in my life, Ill take my own time to get where I want to be.

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$37M in Funding to Support Cornea Cell Therapy | InvisionMag.com – InvisionMag

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

PHILADELPHIA Vantage EyeCare LLC has announced the addition of eight providers, bringing its total to 111 practicing in 45 locations.

It has also added a new division, Phoenixville Eye Care Specialists. A 15th division with five providers is actively planning to on-board, according to a press release. The release describes Vantage as the largest ophthalmology group in the country that remains entirely physician owned.

Staying true to the premise that quality physicians can come together to achieve scale without giving up the ability to best serve our patients, is proving to be a model that we can pragmatically grow with confidence and conviction, said Dr. Richard Prince, president of Vantage.

Heres information on the new providers:

John McLaughlin, MD, served as chief resident at Krieger Eye Institute at Sinai Baltimore after earning a medical degree from George Washington University. His experience in residency with advanced cataract procedures and surgical improvement techniques for glaucoma patients will continue the commitment of Horizon Eye Care to staying at the forefront of eye care in the Southern New Jersey Seashore area. During his education McLaughlin was the chief clinical research assistant at Scheie Eye Institute of University of Pennsylvania on the oncology team.

Lindsey Petsch, OD, is a recent graduate of Pennsylvania College of Optometry at Salus University, where she earned her doctorate of optometry after having completed a bachelor of science at Widener University. Petsch adds to the team of optometrists at Horizon Eye Care with additional training in keratoconus (steep curving of the cornea). She is a longtime area resident who is eager to bring her training and experience to the patients of southern New Jersey.

Brenton Finklea, MD, is a board-certified ophthalmologist with subspecialty training in cornea, external disease and refractive surgery. Finklea attended the University of Florida, where he was a student in the honors college, graduating magna cum laude with a bachelor of science in agricultural and biological engineering with a minor in biomechanics. During this time, he also studied music performance with emphasis on jazz saxophone. He went on to attend medical school at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. Finklea was an intern at the Inova Fairfax Hospital and Georgetown University Hospitals. Residency was at the world-renowned Wills Eye Hospital, followed by a fellowship in academic global ophthalmology at Wills Eye as well. He completed his training with a fellowship in cornea, external disease and refractive Surgery at the Duke University Eye Center.

Iga Gray, MD, joins Philadelphia Eye Associates and Wills Eye Hospital after completing her ophthalmology residency and glaucoma fellowship at the prestigious Scheie Eye Institute at the University of Pennsylvania. Gray treats a wide variety of ocular disease and specializes in the medical and surgical treatment of glaucoma and cataracts. She performs cataract surgery, traditional glaucoma surgery, minimally invasive glaucoma surgeries (MIGS) as well as a variety of laser procedures for the treatment of glaucoma.

Jamine Schecter, MD, FACS, graduated Phi Beta Kappa and magna cum laude from Haverford College. She received her medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and completed her ophthalmology residency training at the Scheie Eye Institute of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia. Shechter is board-certified in ophthalmology and is a fellow of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and the American College of Surgeons. She is a member of the Pennsylvania Academy of Ophthalmology and the American Society of Cataract and Refractive Surgeons, and is on the staff at Phoenixville Hospital and Physicians Care Surgical Hospital.

Susan Wilton, MD, graduated from Bucknell University in 1981 with a bachelor of arts with honors. She followed that up with a MA in clinical psychology from the University of Arizona in 1985. She graduated from medical school at The Medical College of Pennsylvania in 1989 then completed her residency in ophthalmology. She is also a member of the Pennsylvania Academy of Ophthalmology and the Pennsylvania Medical Association.

Thomas Gulibon, OD, graduated magna cum laude from Saint Vincent College and from the Pennsylvania College of Optometry. Gulibon is board-certified in optometry, holds his therapeutic license, and serves as an examiner for the National Board of Examiners in Optometry. He is a member of the American Optometric Association, the Pennsylvania Optometric Association and the Bucks/Montgomery County Optometric Society. Gulibon specializes in contact lenses. He fits difficult cases with the latest technology including lenses for children, high astigmatism, presbyopia, keratoconus and competitive sports.

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$37M in Funding to Support Cornea Cell Therapy | InvisionMag.com - InvisionMag

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Greater London Fund for the Blind rebrands as the Vision Foundation – AOP

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

The Greater London Fund for the Blind has rebranded as the Vision Foundation and announced a five-year strategy to coincide with World Sight Day today (10 October).

The charitys strategy outlines a plan to make London more accessible for people living with sight loss.

It explained that the rebrand and strategy has been launched in response to the growing problem of sight loss in London and the decrease in opportunities for people living with a visual impairment.

CEO of the Vision Foundation, Olivia Curno, said: Sight loss costs London 2.7bn each year, which equates to 300 per Londoner. Behind every single pound of economic cost there is a human story of isolation, poverty, discrimination and exclusion. This is the challenge facing the Vision Foundation in the 21st century.

In a survey of 111 adults living with sight loss carried out by the Vision Foundation, 50% stated that they did not feel like an equal citizen in London, compared to 40% who did with 10% who did not respond.

The Vision Foundation highlighted that 28% of respondents said that better education and awareness about sight loss would have the biggest impact on their quality of life.

When respondents were asked if they felt that London is open to visually impaired people in terms of employment, 33% said yes and 57% said no.

In addition, 80% reported having had mental health issues as a result of their sight loss.

In a YouGov survey of 2203 adults commissioned by the Vision Foundation, 6% of people said they thought that someone who is blind would be able to do all of their job, while 26% said they would be able to do some of their job and 60% said a blind person would not be able to do any of their job. When asked the same question about people who live with partial sight loss, the figures rose to 16%, 48% and 29% respectively.

Chair of trustees at the Vision Foundation, Anna Tylor, said: Its hugely disappointing that so many blind and partially sighted Londoners are not living their best lives and are not able to contribute in the way they could to the economic and cultural life of our great city.

Its an unacceptable position and as a charity we're changing the way we do business to try and address it. Step by step, we are proving that things can be different. But we are under no illusion that our task will be easy. It is only with the help of the rest of London that people who are blind and partially sighted can be active, equal members of society and able to live life to the full, she added.

Its new Londons Sight Loss Charity strapline is designed to highlight the charitys purpose and distinguish it from other sight loss organisations, the Vision Foundation explained.

Speaking about the name change, Ms Curno said: Our new name was chosen after a lengthy consultation with blind and partially sighted people who told us that our old name was old-fashioned, unfriendly and bureaucratic. The Vision Foundation describes an optimistic future and presents what we do and who we help, ensuring our work is better recognised and understood.

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Greater London Fund for the Blind rebrands as the Vision Foundation - AOP

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On World Sight Day 2019, start the healthy habit to exercise your eyes daily – Firstpost

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

On World Sight Day 2019, start the healthy habit to exercise your eyes daily - Firstpost '; $("#aid_" + id + " .dynamicArticle").find('.content-wap-ros-new').html(slot_html); createAd7(slot_id,adCount); slot_id = ''; slot_id = "infinite_content_8th_slot_no" + id; slot_html = ''; $("#aid_" + id + " .dynamicArticle").find('.content-wap-ros').html(slot_html); //createAd8(slot_id,adCount); slot_id = ''; slot_id = "infinite_content_ib_slot_no" + id; slot_html = ''; $("#aid_" + id + " .dynamicArticle").find('.content-wap-ros-ib').html(slot_html); createAd11(slot_id); /*slot_id = ''; slot_id = "infinite_content_9th_slot_no" + id; slot_html = ''; $("#aid_" + id + " .dynamicArticle").find('.ROS_Across_OOP_1x1').html(slot_html); createAd9(slot_id);*/ slot_id = ''; slot_id = "infinite_content_12th_slot_no" + id; slot_html = ''; $("#aid_" + id + " .dynamicArticle").find('.ad-block-300x250').html(slot_html); createAd12(slot_id,adCount); slot_id = ''; slot_id = "infinite_content_13th_slot_no" + id; 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On World Sight Day 2019, start the healthy habit to exercise your eyes daily - Firstpost

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GenSight Biologics Reports Evidence of GS010 DNA Transfer to Contralateral Eye of Primates Unilaterally Injected With GS010 Gene Therapy – BioSpace

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

Oct. 9, 2019 05:30 UTC

PARIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Regulatory News:

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20191008006015/en/

Figure 1: Presence of GS010 DNA in the visual and cerebral systems of test monkeys (Graphic: Business Wire)

GenSight Biologics (Euronext: SIGHT, ISIN: FR0013183985, PEA-PME eligible), a biopharma company focused on discovering and developing innovative gene therapies for retinal neurodegenerative diseases and central nervous system disorders, today reported positive proof of GS010 DNA transfer from one eye to the other eye following unilateral intravitreal injection of primates. In a non-clinical study to investigate the local biodistribution of GS010, tissue samples from the non-injected eye of monkeys that had been unilaterally injected with GS010 were found to contain GS010 DNA three months after injection, indicating the expression of the therapeutic gene in the contralateral eye

These results join a growing body of evidence suggesting the two eyes communicate not only in disease, but also in response to treatment, said David J. Calkins, PhD, ODay Professor, Vice Chair and Director for Research Vanderbilt Eye Institute, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, Tennessee, United States. With the new understanding these results provide, we can move forward with more precise treatments.

Performed by CiToxLAB France, a leading CRO for preclinical research, the study was initiated by GenSight to investigate potential mechanisms behind the unexpected contralateral effect seen in two of GS010s Phase III trials, REVERSE and RESCUE. As previously reported, both trials, which this year completed the two-year follow-up of patients unilaterally injected with GS010, documented sustained bilateral improvements in LogMAR mean visual acuity. The contralateral effect did not conform to expectations for gene therapies administered to only one eye.

The CiToxLAB study uses a purpose-bred species of monkeys, which is favored by scientists and accepted by regulatory bodies due to physiological similarities with humans. For testing at three months, a control monkey was given an intravitreal injection of saline solution in its right eye and was not injected in its left eye. Three test monkeys were given an intravitreal injection of GS010 in their right eyes and not injected in their left eyes. The dosage of GS010 was calibrated to be the allometric equivalent of that used in the GS010 Phase III trials. Three months after the injection, tissues from the right and left eyes were sampled and tested using a qPCR test which had been validated in a dedicated prior study. The highly sensitive and accurate test contains a protocol that specifically targets a portion of the GS010 DNA and can detect the GS010 DNA matrix.

As expected, the qPCR test did not detect the GS010 DNA in any of the tissue samples from the control monkey unilaterally injected with saline solution. Also as expected, the test was able to detect, and in many cases, quantify the presence of GS010 DNA in tissue samples from GS010-injected right eye. Remarkably the qPCR test was also able to detect, and even quantify, viral DNA vector in the contralateral eye, which had received no injection.

Note: qPCR test used to detect GS010 DNA was validated in a dedicated study conducted prior to the monkey study. The graph depicts the number of monkeys whose tissues contained DNA that were within the sensitivity of the test to detect. In some cases, the levels were above the quantifiable threshold.

DNA was detected and quantified in the anterior segment, the retina, as well as the optic nerve of the non-injected contralateral eye. In addition, DNA was detected and quantified in the optic chiasm, suggesting that the anatomic route taken by the viral vector DNA from the treated eye to the non-treated eye was via the optic nerves and chiasm.

The identification of viral vector DNA in the contralateral uninjected eye is an important observation with broader relevance to the design of gene therapy trials for optic neuropathies, noted Dr. Patrick Yu-Wai-Man, Senior Lecturer and Honorary Consultant Ophthalmologist at the University of Cambridge, Moorfields Eye Hospital, and the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology, London, United Kingdom. Although the non-human primate study was not designed to determine the underlying mode of transfer, the presence of viral vector DNA in the optic chiasm and optic nerve of the contralateral uninjected eye points towards a possible diffusion pathway. Further experimental work will clarify these interesting findings.

We are excited about these scientifically significant results, commented Bernard Gilly, Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer of GenSight. Moreover, they vindicate the companys position that the unexpected bilateral improvements seen in the REVERSE and RESCUE trials have a solid scientific basis. The results help provide a compelling argument in support of GS010s marketing authorization application.

GenSight is working with its panel of scientific experts to prepare the findings for submission to a peer-reviewed journal later this year.

Dr. Yu-Wai-Man will discuss these findings when he presents RESCUE results at the 2019 annual meeting of the American Academy of Ophthalmology in San Francisco, CA:

Session Date: Sunday, October 13Paper Session: OP04 Neuro-Ophthalmology Original PaperSession Time: 2:00 PM to 3:15 PMLocation: South 152Presenter: Patrick Yu-Wai-Man, FRCOphth MBBS PhDPresentation time: 3:00 p.m.

About GenSight Biologics

GenSight Biologics S.A. is a clinical-stage biopharma company focused on discovering and developing innovative gene therapies for retinal neurodegenerative diseases and central nervous system disorders. GenSight Biologics pipeline leverages two core technology platforms, the Mitochondrial Targeting Sequence (MTS) and optogenetics, to help preserve or restore vision in patients suffering from blinding retinal diseases. GenSight Biologics lead product candidate, GS010, is in Phase III trials in Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON), a rare mitochondrial disease that leads to irreversible blindness in teens and young adults. Using its gene therapy-based approach, GenSight Biologics product candidates are designed to be administered in a single treatment to each eye by intravitreal injection to offer patients a sustainable functional visual recovery.

About GS010

GS010 targets Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) by leveraging a mitochondrial targeting sequence (MTS) proprietary technology platform, arising from research conducted at the Institut de la Vision in Paris, which, when associated with the gene of interest, allows the platform to specifically address defects inside the mitochondria using an AAV vector (Adeno-Associated Virus). The gene of interest is transferred into the cell to be expressed and produces the functional protein, which will then be shuttled to the mitochondria through specific nucleotidic sequences in order to restore the missing or deficient mitochondrial function.

About Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON)

Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) is a rare maternally inherited mitochondrial genetic disease, characterized by the degeneration of retinal ganglion cells that results in brutal and irreversible vision loss that can lead to legal blindness, and mainly affects adolescents and young adults. LHON is associated with painless, sudden loss of central vision in the 1st eye, with the 2nd eye sequentially impaired. It is a symmetric disease with poor functional visual recovery. 97% of patients have bilateral involvement at less than one year of onset of vision loss, and in 25% of cases, vision loss occurs in both eyes simultaneously. The estimated incidence of LHON is approximately 1,400 to 1,500 new patients who lose their sight every year in the United States and Europe.

About REVERSE and RESCUE

REVERSE and RESCUE are two separate randomized, double-masked, sham-controlled Phase III trials designed to evaluate the efficacy of a single intravitreal injection of GS010 (rAAV2/2-ND4) in subjects affected by LHON due to the G11778A mutation in the mitochondrial ND4 gene.

The primary endpoint will measure the difference in efficacy of GS010 in treated eyes compared to sham-treated eyes based on BestCorrected Visual Acuity (BCVA), as measured with the ETDRS at 48 weeks post-injection. The patients LogMAR (Logarithm of the Minimal Angle of Resolution) scores, which are derived from the number of letters patients read on the ETDRS chart, will be used for statistical purposes. Both trials have been adequately powered to evaluate a clinically relevant difference of at least 15 ETDRS letters between treated and untreated eyes adjusted to baseline.

The secondary endpoints will involve the application of the primary analysis to bestseeing eyes that received GS010 compared to those receiving sham, and to worseseeing eyes that received GS010 compared to those that received sham. Additionally, a categorical evaluation with a responder analysis will be evaluated, including the proportion of patients who maintain vision (< ETDRS 15L loss), the proportion of patients who gain 15 ETDRS letters from baseline and the proportion of patients with Snellen acuity of >20/200. Complementary vision metrics will include automated visual fields, optical coherence tomography, and color and contrast sensitivity, in addition to quality of life scales, biodissemination and the time course of immune response. Readouts for these endpoints are at 48, 72 and 96 weeks after injection.

The trials are conducted in parallel, in 37 subjects for REVERSE and 39 subjects for RESCUE, in 7 centers across the United States, the UK, France, Germany and Italy. Week 96 results were reported in 2019 for both trials, after which patients were transferred to a long-term follow-up study that will last for three years.

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers: REVERSE: NCT02652780RESCUE: NCT02652767

About REFLECT

REFLECT is a multi-center, randomized, double-masked, placebo-controlled study to evaluate the safety and efficacy of bilateral injections of GS010 in subjects with LHON due to the NADH dehydrogenase 4 (ND4) mutation.

The trial planned to enroll 90 patients with vision loss up to 1 year in duration and will be conducted in multiple centers in Europe and in the US.

In the active arm, GS010 will be administered as a single intravitreal injection to both eyes of each subject. In the placebo arm, GS010 will be administered as a single intravitreal injection to the first affected eye, while the fellow eye will receive a placebo injection.

The primary endpoint for the REFLECT trial is the BCVA reported in LogMAR at 1-Year post-treatment in the secondaffected/notyetaffected eye. The change from baseline in secondaffected/notyetaffected eyes receiving GS010 and placebo will be the primary response of interest. The secondary efficacy endpoints include: BCVA reported in LogMAR at 2-Years post-treatment in the secondaffected/notyetaffected eye compared to both placebo and the firstaffected eye receiving GS010, OCT and contrast sensitivity and quality of life scales. The first subject was treated in March 2018, and enrolment was completed in July 2019, ahead of schedule.

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifiers: REFLECT: NCT03293524

View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20191008006015/en/

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Opening the doors for the region’s blind residents – Concentrate

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

What would you do if you suddenly lost your sight?

A new project aimed at helping newly-blinded Great Lakes Bay Region residents prepare for the change that experiencing loss of sight lives brings is in the works.

I am the organizer of this project, because years ago, my heart was broken when I returned to Midland after an eight-year absence. Blind all my life, I realized that, although I was born totally blind and learned many valuable skills as a young child, most people who have visual impairments have become so because of eye diseases that began when they were older.

A new project aimed at helping newly-blinded people in the Great Lakes Bay Region prepare for the change that experiencing loss of sight lives brings is in the works.Able to see all their lives; now, they cant go anywhere without someone leading them, they cant read the paper, use a computer or watch TV. Perhaps they struggle to cut their food, they spill their drinks or trip over things around the house.

Sometimes the newly blind dont know whom to talk to, what they need to learn or if they can do any of the everyday things they used to do. And most communities dont have enough of the specialized services and equipment they need.

My new project, called Life After Blindness, is an attempt to help people determine what their future lives will be like. When the ophthalmologist says Sorry; theres no more we can do, I can visit their houses or talk to them on the phone.

I can fully attest to the fact that life need not be over; these people have the power to choose what life with vision loss will be like.

It all can be done, those with sight loss just need to learn some adaptations that may have to be made from their previous way of doing activities.Sometimes, when I first talk to someone with sight loss, he or she says, I dont know what to do. I dont know who to talk to. One woman said she had made the rounds of local pharmacies and had not found a single white cane for sale.

Typically, most adaptive devices for people with visual impairments are available only through the mail. White canes must be ordered to fit a persons height, and canes are made in increments of two inches in length.

Another resource that is available is working with a service dog. But before getting the aid of a service animal, a person should have white-cane training to know the basics of getting around before getting a dog. Besides, a young dog is strong and speedy and probably will try to take control away from the master until they learn to work together.

Most adaptive devices for people with visual impairments are available only through the mail.Here are some of the questions I often ask people about their life plans after blindness: Do you want to learn to use a computer? Do you want to know how to turn on speech in a cell phone and understand how to give it commands? Do you want to learn Braille, and if you do, why? (Braille is English, just like print is, but many characters have multiple uses and there are many contractions think of them as being like the &sign.) Do you want to cook and clean your house independently? That means your stove, microwave, washer and dryer need tactile markings to choose settings. Do you want to continue hobbies such as sewing, woodworking or carpentry? You might need needle threaders and Braille sewing patterns, and a bit of safety training to continue using tools.

It all can be done, those with sight loss just need to learn some adaptations that may have to be made from their previous way of doing activities.

Cheryl Wade started Life After Blindness as a personal passion after seeing the need.One man told me he has definite goals: He wants to hunt, hike and fish the way he used to, and he wants to go to one of his favorite places in Oscoda. So, right now, I am looking for a volunteer to drive him and to describe the lay of the land. Another woman needs someone to teach her how to use an Android phone with the speech turned on, and I cant find anyone locally who knows how to do that.

There are many adaptations that can assist the newly blind. Audible books available from a free lending library, computers that read words on the screen audibly and aid in screen navigation, movies that describe whats happening on the screen.

There is free training through the State of Michigan to help people learn to travel with a white cane, use computers and read Braille. There is bold lined paper and tactile lined paper for writing print. There are options to make Android and iPhones speak out of the box and dozens of gadgets for all kinds of tasks. But users might need specialized training thats not available locally.

A great resource that is available is working with a service dog once a person has learned adaptations on their own.Services in the region include ride services, meals, transportation and help determining home modifications,exercise facilities,and art classes. The Disability Network of Mid-Michigan has a kit filled with adaptive devices that people experiencing sight loss might need, and the organization can provide advocacy and help people adjust to new disabilities.

But there is almost no one who knows how to adapt these events for persons with little or no vision and who have not had training to help them get what they need. Having a teacher point a finger and say the easels are over there doesnt do it for a blind person. Designing art projects that largely are based on the sense of touch is challenging. And how does a person with almost no vision navigate a large exercise facility with multiple strength training machines?

Cheryl Wade and her dog out for a walk in Midland.Thats why I hope to find volunteers who can orient folks to their surroundings using cardinal directions, audible or tactile landmarks to get around a building, or gauging distances and the time it takes to get from one place or thing to another. Perhaps sight-impaired people need to grab a sighted persons elbow to get around a store or an exhibit. We have teachers and counselors from the state who can help train people to adjust to blindness, but they work in multiple counties and cant drop everythingwhen someone has a question such as, I dont know how to make a Braille z. I could answer that question.

As a trained rehabilitation (disability and employment) counselor with a masters degree from Michigan State University, I also am prepared to talk about the psychological changes that a new, expensive, pain-in-the-neck disability might cause. Withdrawal, denial and acceptance are part of the grieving process, and the negative emotions might return from time to time.

Life After Blindness, is an attempt to help people determine what their future lives will be like.I am working with a group of area residents who have sight loss and who meet on the last Saturday of almost every month for a delicious, free lunch and a presentation by a speaker. The group meets at Aldersgate United Methodist Church, 2206 Airfield Lane, and the meeting lasts from 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. Rides are available. To sign up, call Dick Skochdopole, (989) 835-6433.

At this early stage, I am working to meet people who are blind and find local service clubs to provide us with drivers, guides and donations. With a few hundred dollars a year, I hope to buy equipment such as Braillers and accessible aids and games. I also the ability and connections to acquire used equipment.

"I can fully attest to the fact that life need not be over."I hope to have a food-cutting workshop in which people can feel things like cake or meat with their hands, then figure out how to hold a knife so it will cut rather than having the end stick up in the air. By taking the time for this activity, people could practice cutting in a straight line, then cutting perpendicular to that line. As a member of Michigan Ski for Light a group for blind and mobility-impaired skiers I hope to acquire donated ski equipment and get some of my new friends on skis next year.

If youor someone you know has been impacted by vision loss, please know that life isnt over and there are resources and people to help.

For more information or to inquire about being a volunteer for someone with vision loss, contact me at (517) 574-6898 or wadecheryl42@gmail.com.

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I Tried to Avoid the Eye Doctor With This Gadget and Failed Miserably – Gizmodo

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

The unnecessarily complicated story of how an irresponsible adult got new pair glasses. Photo: Victoria Song (Gizmodo)

You should go to your eye doctor more than once every twelve years. Thats called being an adult and having good common sense. I, however, am bad at adulting and somehow found myself in my early thirties, wearing a severely outdated prescription. How bad was it? I was at the point where after leaving the subway, I needed to take out my iPhone and use the camera to zoom in on the next street to see what direction I should walk in.

An at-home test to check your prescription

Checking my prescription in my pajamas. Can order glasses online via app.

I still had to go to the eye doctor. The doctor's prescription was more accurate.

Thats why I jumped at the chance to check out EyeQue VisionCheck. For $70, you can ostensibly check your vision via an optical smartphone attachment and then actually order glasses online. As someone with phone anxiety and a deep existential hatred of doctors officesits a dream come true. Initially, I was wary that something like this could work to any degree. When I saw EyeQue had won the CES 2019 Innovation Award, I felt somewhat reassured that the worst that could happen was I got a bunk pair of glasses. While some CES Innovation Awards border on wacky (This Umay Rest Thermal Meditation band?), its also awarded to legitimate products like the Lenovo Yoga Book C930 or the Sony WH-100xM3 headphones.

The idea behind the EyeQue is its essentially a miniature, phone-based version of that large contraption at your eye doctors officean autorefractor. You know, that hulking machine you sit at and stare at a picture of a blurry house or hot air balloon until it gradually comes into focus. (Its used to estimate your prescription, before further refining it with a phoropter while you look at a Big E chart.)How it works is you first download the EyeQue VisionCheck app for iOS or Android, and strap the mini refractometer to your phone screen. Then you stick it to your eye, and what you end up seeing are two discrete linesone green, one red. Your job is essentially to merge the green and red lines together into one yellow one, with the help of some touch sensors on the side of the device. You do this about eight times per eye, which altogether make up one test. This somehow measures how light is refracted into your eye and voil, the app spits out a prescription.

The second half of the test involves a pair of plastic glasses to measure your pupillary distanceor, the distance between your pupils. You basically stick the glasses on, take a selfie with the app, and then mark the center of your pupils and the glasses bridge with some little green xs. If youre used to getting your glasses from a physical store, its not a measurement youve probably heard of. Conversely, online services like Warby Parker, GlassesUSA, and Zenni Optical all rely on pupillary distance to give you the best possible fit.

If this sounds wacky, it kind of is. You will look stupid. I most definitely did. To learn how to properly take the test, I had a Skype demo with the EyeQue folks. In the process, I got a fair number of looks from bewildered coworkers. It also takes about 15 minutes to really get a feel for what youre supposed to do, thought there are tutorials within the app to help. I also found the sensors to be a bit difficult to press, meaning theyre probably not the best for the elderly or people with limited mobility in their hands. EyeQue recommended you take at least three tests for accuracy, but since itd been so long since my last eye test, they advised I take the test an additional three times just to be safe. All in all, it took about an hour for me to finish 6 tests. Once that was done, I put in an order for a new pair of glasses, which arrived about two weeks later.

As I expected, years of sitting hunched over my computer screen meant my eyesight had deteriorated. My old prescription jumped from -7 in each eye to -7.75. The cylindrical measurement for my right eye went from -1.25 to -2.25. My axis measurement in the right eye stayed about the same, going from 170 to 164. My left eye, however, worsened from 10 to 29.

But how accurate were these readings really? Sure, when I put on the pair Id ordered through EyeQue, my initial thought was Oh, so thats how faraway things are supposed to look. That said, small print or distant signs were still blurry. If I closed my left eye, things got way fuzzier. Many moons ago, a doctor told me my eyes were tragically bad thanks to severe astigmatism. That made me wonder if the reason my vision was still blurry was because EyeQue couldnt handle eyes as bad as mine. To find out I had to suck it up, put my health insurance to good use, and go to an eye doctor.

So off I went. In addition to finding out I had many, many things wrong with my eyes (dont sleep with contacts in), the doctor also told me to throw the EyeQue in the garbage. After a vision test, she determined my prescription was in fact, -9 in the right eye and -8 in the left. Other than that the cylindrical and axis measurements were relatively similar. I was still -2.25 and 165 in the right, and -1.25 and 15 in the left. That didnt seem all that different to me, but my eye doctor thought otherwise. Looking at the EyeQue readings, she noted that it failed to catch my right eye was much worse than my lefta fact I vaguely remembered my childhood doctor telling me as well. To drive the point home, she had me try and read letters off a chart with the prescription she wrote for me, and then with the one EyeQue had given. Things were undeniably much clearer with my eye doctors prescription. (That said, my right eye is so bad my doctor said its unlikely Ill ever get 20/20 vision, even with glasses.)

In my doctors opinion, something like EyeQue would probably be fine for someone with a low prescription, without more complex issues like astigmatism. She was also quick to point out that it would not be a good idea for contacts, and strongly emphasized that devices are unable to diagnose serious conditions like macular degeneration, cataracts, or glaucoma. Not that EyeQue claims it can do any of those thingsit doesnt. But I can see how it might be easy to conflate vision tracking with overall eye health. Similarly, people sometimes hail the Apple Watch as a device that might save your life simply because it can now monitor for irregular heart rate or arrhythmia. However, just because an Apple Watch doesnt sound an alarm, doesnt mean youre free and clear. In the same vein, if EyeQue doesnt detect worsening vision, that doesnt mean your eyes are in perfect health.

Finally, while EyeQue did win a CES Innovation Award, thats not a substitute for something like FDA clearance. Sure, it sounds impressive but winning an award isnt the same thing as earning a certification from a government agency.

I went back to EyeQue with my eye doctors concerns, and my different results. An EyeQue spokesperson emailed me back, writing, Theres actually no magic number. Eye doctors generally consider variance up to 0.5 diopters as acceptablemeaning if you visited a different ophthalmologist on the same day, you would likely get a slightly different prescription.

EyeQue also said that the results I got from its test was comparable to the one my eye doctor gave me. That struck me as odd, given my eye doctors reaction. They also told me that 90 percent of their customers surveyed said glasses they ordered via EyeQue performed the same (33 percent) or better (53 percent) than previous pairs. Its true the EyeQue glasses I ordered were better than my old ones. Its also true the glasses I got with my eye doctors prescription were even better. Vision is important, and it stands within good reason that Id want the best possible prescription for my money.

EyeQue is designed to be used between doctors visits to get more people engaged with their eye health. The convenience of having these devices at home means you can take a quick test any time you feel your vision, or your familys vision has changed, the spokesperson added.

That last bit sounds fair. Except, if I still have to go to my eye doctor, who will likely check my vision each time I go, then what is the point again? Savings? An in-store prescription check at Warby Parker is $40, and you could probably find local optometrists for similar prices. Thats relatively affordable even if you dont have insurance. If you have vision insurance, a routine eye exam is probably covered to an extentmy copay was $30. Both cases are cheaper than the $70 EyeQue. If the actual cost of frames and lenses is the issue, well EyeQue isnt really going to solve that. Im not convinced its a good means of further engaging with your health either. After all, it took 12 years to feel my vision had changed and that maybe I needed a checkup. Plus, it might just be my doctor, but she didnt find my EyeQue results that compelling or helpful.

So if not savings, is it convenience? While I found EyeQue easier to use the more tests I did, I wouldnt call it easier than telling my eye doctor whether or not something was clearer or blurrier. Sure, it was cool that I could spend an hour at home in my jammies, staring into a tube attached to my phone. But that hour roughly added up to the amount of time I spent filling out forms, waiting, and finally being examined at the doctors. Start to finish, ordering a pair of glasses through EyeQue and ordering them on my own took about the same amount of time.

The most valuable thing I got from this experience was it forced me to go to the eye doctor. EyeQue would probably say that was the goal all along. I could see this as being useful for anyone who lives in a remote area, where its not at all easy to get to an eye doctor. It might also come in handy for the disabled. Or if your only pair of glasses broke and you just needed a new pair of glasses quickly without fussing with insurance or finding an optometrist.

That said, if the main reason you havent been to the eye doctor is lazinessyou really dont need to shell out $70 for the privilege of taking eye exams at home. Especially not when there are cheaper options available. Dont be like me. Suck it up. Go get your eyes checked out.

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Omega Launches New Collection of Luxury Eyewear with Marcolin Group – InvisionMag

Thursday, October 10th, 2019

(PRESS RELEASE) DUBLIN In support of World Sight Day, Horizon Therapeutics plc (Nasdaq: HZNP) and Prevent Blindness launched a campaign that brings together the voices of the thyroid eye disease (TED) community to educate the public on how TED can damage vision and encourage people who are living with TED to put their vision first by sharing their experiences, monitoring their symptoms and finding the right doctor. World Sight Day is an internationally recognized awareness day designed to focus attention on blindness and vision impairment. This years dialogue emphasizes Vision First, with a call to the community to make vision a priority.

Now through Oct. 31, 2019, Horizon will donate $1 (up to $10,000) to Prevent Blindness every time someone texts EYE to 56512. The campaign also invites the TED community to visit http://www.MyTEDStory.com to share how they have seen TED affect vision whether it be from experiencing it personally, or watching a friend, loved one or patient endure it. Select stories will be compiled and shared on social media to help people who are living with TED, healthcare professionals and the general public better understand the disease. Spotting the signs and symptoms of TED early can help decrease the chances of permanent eye damage. People who are at risk for TED, including those with Graves disease, are encouraged to pay attention to changes in their eyes such as pain, redness, light sensitivity, bulging, blurry vision and double vision and visit an ophthalmologist or oculoplastic surgeon to get an eye exam.

According to the World Health Organization, approximately 80 percent of all vision impairment across the globe is considered avoidable this statistic is both shocking and unacceptable, said Jeff Todd, president and CEO, Prevent Blindness. As a part of our sight-saving mission, we are thrilled to partner with Horizon to raise awareness about TED and inspire patients to actively monitor and successfully manage their symptoms.

TED is a serious, progressive and vision-threatening autoimmune disease.1,2 TED begins with active TED that may last for up to three years, after which damage to the eyes can be irreversible.1,3 Common symptoms include light sensitivity, eye grittiness, bulging eyes and double vision, among others all of which can reduce a persons independence, ability to work and self-confidence.1,4 As TED progresses, it can cause long-term, irreversible damage. Effective management of TED requires early diagnosis and active monitoring to identify the best opportunity for medical intervention.1 Patients who suspect that they may have TED should visit an eye specialist, such as an ophthalmologist or oculoplastic surgeon, to have their eyes examined. To learn more about TED, visit the new Prevent Blindness web resource and visit http://www.ThyroidEyes.com to sign up to receive information about TED.

At Horizon, weve made it our priority to better understand the needs of the TED community, said Matt Flesch, vice president, communications and patient advocacy, Horizon. Through conversations with patients, caregivers and healthcare professionals, weve heard how this disease can impair vision making it difficult to do the things we often take for granted, like drive, walk up or down stairs alone and read. By working together with Prevent Blindness, we hope to multiply our efforts and reach even more people with the TED education and support they need to speak up and be good advocates for their eye health.

To learn more about World Sight Day and other ways to get involved, visit the website for The International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness.

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Vision Loss, Sudden – Eye Disorders – Merck Manuals …

Monday, October 7th, 2019

Sudden loss of vision without eye pain

Blindness in one eye lasting minutes to hours

Ultrasonography of the carotid arteries

Echocardiogram (ultrasound of the heart)

Continuous monitoring of heart rhythm

Almost instantaneous, complete loss of vision in one eye

In people with risk factors for atherosclerosis (such as high blood pressure, abnormal blood lipids, or cigarette smoking)

Measurement of ESR (a blood test), C-reactive protein, and platelets

In people with risk factors for this disorder (such as diabetes, high blood pressure, a tendency for blood to clot excessively, or sickle cell disease)

Vitreous hemorrhage (bleeding into the vitreous humorthe jellylike substance that fills the back of the eyeball)

In people who have had specks, strings, or cobwebs in their field of vision (floaters) or who have risk factors for vitreous hemorrhage (such as diabetes, a tear in the retina, sickle cell disease, or an eye injury)

Usually loss of the entire field of vision (not in just one or more spots)

Examination by an ophthalmologist

Sometimes ultrasonography of the retina

Sometimes headache, pain while combing the hair, or pain in the jaw or tongue when chewing

Sometimes aches and stiffness in the large muscles of the arms or legs (polymyalgia rheumatica)

Measurement of ESR, C-reactive protein, and platelets

Biopsy of the temporal artery

In people with risk factors for this disorder (such as diabetes or high blood pressure) or in people who have had an episode of very low blood pressure, which sometimes causes fainting

Measurement of ESR, C-reactive protein, and platelets

Sometimes biopsy of temporal artery

Sometimes carotid artery Doppler (ultrasound of the neck veins) and echocardiogram (ultrasound of the heart)

Macular hemorrhage (bleeding around the maculathe most sensitive part of the retina) resulting from age-related macular degeneration

Usually in people known to have age-related macular degeneration or in people with risk factors for blood vessel disorders (such as high blood pressure, cigarette smoking, or abnormal blood lipids)

Ocular migraine (migraines that affect vision)

Shimmering, irregular spots that drift slowly across the field of vision of one eye for about 10 to 20 minutes

Sometimes blurring of central vision (what a person is looking at directly)

Sometimes a headache after the disturbances in vision

Often in young people or in people known to have migraines

Sudden, spontaneous flashes of light that can look like lightning, spots, or stars (photopsias) that occur repeatedly

Loss of vision that affects one area, usually what is seen out of the corners of the eye (peripheral vision)

Loss of vision that spreads across the field of vision like a curtain

Sometimes in people with risk factors for detachment of the retina (such as a recent eye injury, recent eye surgery, or severe nearsightedness)

Usually loss of the same parts of the field of vision in both eyes

In people with risk factors for these disorders (such as high blood pressure, atherosclerosis, diabetes, abnormal blood lipids, and cigarette smoking)

Sometimes slurred speech, impaired eye movements, muscle weakness, and/or difficulty walking

Ultrasonography of the carotid arteries

Echocardiogram (ultrasound of the heart)

Continuous monitoring of heart rhythm

Sudden loss of vision with eye pain

Severe eye ache and redness

Headache, nausea, vomiting, and sensitivity to light

Disturbances in vision such as seeing halos around lights

Measurement of pressure inside the eye (tonometry)

Examination of eye's drainage channels with a special lens (gonioscopy), done by an ophthalmologist

Often a grayish patch on the cornea that later becomes an open, painful sore

Eye ache or a foreign object (body) sensation

Sometimes in people who have an infection after an eye injury or who have slept with their contact lenses in

Culture of a sample taken from the ulcer, done by an ophthalmologist

Optic neuritis (inflammation of the optic nerve), which can be related to multiple sclerosis

Usually mild pain that may worsen when the eyes are moved

Partial or complete loss of vision

Eyelids and corneas that appear normal

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Safeguarding your sight – Harvard Health

Saturday, October 5th, 2019

Although aging puts people at greater risk for serious eye disease and other eye problems, loss of sight need not go hand in hand with growing older. Practical, preventive measures can help protect against devastating impairment. An estimated 40% to 50% of all blindness can be avoided or treated, mainly through regular visits to a vision specialist.

Regular eye exams are the cornerstone of visual health as people age. Individuals who have a family history of eye disease or other risk factors should have more frequent exams. Don't wait until your vision deteriorates to have an eye exam. One eye can often compensate for the other while an eye condition progresses. Frequently, only an exam can detect eye disease in its earliest stages.

You can take other steps on your own. First, if you smoke, stop. Smoking increases the risk of several eye disorders, including age-related macular degeneration. Next, take a look at your diet. Maintaining a nutritious diet, with lots of fruits and vegetables and minimal saturated fats and hydrogenated oils, promotes sound health and may boost your resistance to eye disease. Wearing sunglasses and hats is important for people of any age. Taking the time to learn about the aging eye and recognizing risks and symptoms can alert you to the warning signs of vision problems.

Although eyestrain, spending many hours in front of a television or computer screen, or working in poor light does not cause harmful medical conditions, it can tire the eyes and, ultimately, their owner. The eyes are priceless and deserve to be treated with care and respect and that is as true for the adult of 80 as it is for the teenager of 18.

Myth: Doing eye exercises will delay the need for glasses.

Fact: Eye exercises will not improve or preserve vision or reduce the need for glasses. Your vision depends on many factors, including the shape of your eye and the health of the eye tissues, none of which can be significantly altered with eye exercises.

Myth: Reading in dim light will worsen your vision.

Fact: Although dim lighting will not adversely affect your eyesight, it will tire your eyes out more quickly. The best way to position a reading light is to have it shine directly onto the page, not over your shoulder. A desk lamp with an opaque shade pointing directly at the reading material is the best possible arrangement. A light that shines over your shoulder will cause a glare, making it more difficult to see the reading material.

Myth: Eating carrots is good for the eyes.

Fact: There is some truth in this one. Carrots, which contain vitamin A, are one of several vegetables that are good for the eyes. But fresh fruits and dark green leafy vegetables, which contain more antioxidant vitamins such as C and E, are even better. Antioxidant vitamins may help protect the eyes against cataract and age-related macular degeneration. But eating any vegetables or supplements containing these vitamins or substances will not prevent or correct basic vision problems such as nearsightedness or farsightedness.

Myth: It's best not to wear glasses all the time. Taking a break from glasses or contact lenses allows your eyes to rest.

Fact: If you need glasses for distance or reading, use them. Attempting to read without reading glasses will simply strain your eyes and tire them out. Using your glasses won't worsen your vision or lead to any eye disease.

Myth: Staring at a computer screen all day is bad for the eyes.

Fact: Although using a computer will not harm your eyes, staring at a computer screen all day will contribute to eyestrain or tired eyes. Adjust lighting so that it does not create a glare or harsh reflection on the screen. Also, when you're working on a computer or doing other close work such as reading or sewing, it's a good idea to rest your eyes briefly every hour or so to lessen eye fatigue. Finally, people who stare at a computer screen for long periods tend not to blink as often as usual, which can cause the eyes to feel dry and uncomfortable. Make a conscious effort to blink regularly so that the eyes stay well lubricated and do not dry out.

Disclaimer:As a service to our readers, Harvard Health Publishing provides access to our library of archived content. Please note the date of last review on all articles. No content on this site, regardless of date, should ever be used as a substitute for direct medical advice from your doctor or other qualified clinician.

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Optometry – Wikipedia

Friday, October 4th, 2019

Optometry

Optometry Logo; A caduceus with an eye at the top.

Occupation type

Activity sectors

Education required

Fields ofemployment

Related jobs

Optometry is a health care profession that involves examining the eyes and applicable visual systems for defects or abnormalities as well as the medical diagnosis and management of eye disease.

Traditionally, the field of optometry began with the primary focus of correcting refractive error through the use of spectacles. Modern day optometry, however, has evolved through time so that the educational curriculum additionally includes intensive medical training in the diagnosis and management of ocular disease, in most of the countries of the world, where the profession is established and regulated.

Optometrists (also known as doctors of optometry in the United States and Canada, by higher degree in the United Kingdom and worldwide for those holding the O.D. degree) are health care professionals who provide primary eye care through comprehensive eye examinations to detect and treat various visual abnormalities and eye diseases. Being a regulated profession, an optometrist's scope of practice may differ depending on the location. Thus, disorders or diseases detected outside the treatment scope of optometry (i.e those requiring certain surgical interventions) are referred out to relevant medical professionals for proper care, more commonly to ophthalmologists who are physicians that specialize in tertiary medical and surgical care of the eye. Optometrists typically work closely together with other eye care professionals such as ophthalmologists and opticians to deliver quality and efficient eyecare to the general public.

The term "optometry" comes from the Greek words (opsis; "view") and (metron; "something used to measure", "measure", "rule"). The word entered the language when the instrument for measuring vision was called an optometer, (before the terms phoropter or refractor were used). The root word opto is a shortened form derived from the Greek word ophthalmos meaning, "eye." Like most healthcare professions, the education and certification of optometrists is regulated in most countries. Optometric professionals and optometry-related organizations interact with governmental agencies, other healthcare professionals, and the community to deliver eye and vision-care.

The World Council of Optometry, World Health Organization and about 75 optometry organisations from over 40 countries have all over the world adopted the following definition, to be used to describe optometry and optometrist.[1]

Optometry is a healthcare profession that is autonomous, educated, and regulated (licensed/registered), and optometrists are the primary healthcare practitioners of the eye and visual system who provide comprehensive eye and vision care, which includes refraction and dispensing, detection/diagnosis and management of disease in the eye, and the rehabilitation of conditions of the visual system.[2]

Optometric history is tied to the development of

The history of optometry can be traced back to the early studies on optics and image formation by the eye. The origins of optometric science (optics, as taught in a basic physics class) date back a few thousand years BC as evidence of the existence of lenses for decoration has been found in Greece and the Netherlands.[citation needed]

It is unknown when the first spectacles were made. The British scientist and historian Sir Joseph Needham, in his Science and Civilization in China, discusses the occasional claim that spectacles were invented in China. He states that the belief may have been based on a source that was modified during the Ming dynasty (14th - 17th century), that the original document made no references to eyeglasses, and that the references that were there[which?] stated the eyeglasses were imported.[3]

Alternatively, research by David A. Goss in the United States shows they may have originated independently in the late 13th century in Italy as stated in a manuscript from 1305 where a monk from Pisa named Rivalto stated "It is not yet 20 years since there was discovered the art of making eyeglasses".[4] Spectacles were manufactured in Italy, Germany, and the Netherlands by 1300.

In 1907, Professor Berthold Laufer, who was a German American anthropologist, stated in his history of spectacles 'the opinion that spectacles originated in India is of the greatest probability and that spectacles must have been known in India earlier than in Europe'.[5][6]

In Sri Lanka It is well documented that during the reign of King Bhuvanekabahu the IV (AD 1346 1353) of the Gampola period the ancient tradition of optical lens making with natural stone called Diyatarippu was given royal patronage. A few of the craftsman still live and practice in the original hamlet given to the exponents of the craft by royal decree.

But Joseph Needham stated in his "Science and Civilization" that the paper by Laufer had many inconsistencies, and that the references in the document used by Laufer were not in the original copies but added during the Ming dynasty.[7]

However, the German word brille (eyeglasses) is derived from Sanskrit vaidurya.[8] Etymologically, brille is derived from beryl, Latin beryllus, from Greek beryllos, from Prakrit verulia, veluriya, from Sanskrit vaidurya, of Dravidian origin from the city of Velur (modern Belur). Medieval Latin berillus was also applied to eyeglasses, hence German brille, from Middle High German berille, and French besicles (plural) spectacles, altered from old French bericle.[9]

Benito Daza de Valdes published the first full book on optometry in 1623, where he mentioned the use and fitting of eyeglasses.[10] In 1692, William Molyneux wrote a book on optics and lenses where he stated his ideas on myopia and problems related to close-up vision. The scientists Claudius Ptolemy and Johannes Kepler also contributed to the creation of optometry. Kepler discovered how the retina in the eye creates vision. From 1773 until around 1829, Thomas Young discovered the disability of astigmatism and it was George Biddell Airy who designed glasses to correct that problem that included spherocylindrical lens.[11]

Although the term optometry appeared in the 1759 book A Treatise on the Eye: The Manner and Phenomena of Vision by Scottish physician William Porterfield, it was not until the early twentieth century in the United States and Australia that it began to be used to describe the profession. By the early twenty-first century however, marking the distinction with dispensing opticians, it had become the internationally accepted term.

Optometry is officially recognized in many jurisdictions.[12] Most have regulations concerning education and practice. Optometrists, like many other healthcare professionals, are required to participate in ongoing continuing education courses to stay current on the latest standards of care. The World Council of Optometry has a web resource that provides basic information on eye care providers for more than 46 countries.

In 1993 there were five countries in Africa with optometric teaching institutes: Sudan, Ghana, Nigeria, South Africa and Tanzania.[13]

Sudan's major institution for training of optometrists is the Faculty of Optometry and visual Sciences (FOVS), originally established in 1954 as the Institute of Optometry in Khartoum; the Institute joined with the ministry of Higher Education in 1986 as the High Institute of Optometry, and ultimately was annexed into Alneelain University in 1997 when it was re-named to the FOVS. Currently the FOVS has the following programs: 1) BSc optometry in 5 years with sub-specialization in either orthoptics, contact lenses, ocular photography or ocular neurology; 2) BCs in ophthalmic technology, requiring four 4 years of training; and BCs in optical dispensary, achieved in 4 years. The FOVS also offers MSc and PhD degrees in Optometry. The FOVS is the only institute of its kind in Sudan and was the first insitution of higher education in Optometry in the Middle East and Africa.[citation needed] In 2010, Alneelain University Eye Hospital was established as part of the FOVS to expand training capacity and to serve broader Sudanese community.

The Ghana Optometric Association (GOA) regulates the practise of Optometry in Ghana. After the six-year training at any of the two universities offering the course, the O.D degree is awarded. The new optometrist must write a qualifying exam, after which the optometrist is admitted as a member of the GOA, leading to the award of the title MGOA.

The first optometry course in Mozambique was started in 2009 at Universidade Lurio, Nampula. The course is part of the Mozambique Eyecare Project. University of Ulster, Dublin Institute of Technology and Brien Holden Vision Institute are supporting partners.

In Nigeria, optometry is regulated by the Optometry and Dispensing Opticians Registration Board of Nigeria established under the Optometry and Dispensing Opticians ( Registration ETC ) Act of 1989 (Cap O9 Laws of Federation of Nigeria 2004). The Boards publishes from time to time lists of approved qualifications and training institutions in the federal government gazette.[14] The Doctor of Optometry degree is awarded after a six-year training at one of the accredited universities in Imo, Edo and Abia states.

From 2010 Optometry was first introduced in Bangladesh in Institute of Community Ophthalmology Under Medicine Faculty of University of Chittagong http://icoedu.org. This institute offers a four years Bachelor of science in Optometry (B.Optom) course. Currently there are 60 Graduated Optometrists in Bangladesh. The association which controls the quality of Optometry practice all over the country is named as 'Optometrists Association of Bangladesh' which is also a country member of World Council of Optometry(WCO).

In the year 2018 Chittagong Medical University formed and the Bsc. in Optometry course shifted to this University.

In Bangladesh Optometrists perform primary eye care like Diagnosis and primary management of some ocular diseases, Prescribe Eye Glasses, Low vision rehabilitation, contact lens practice and all type of Orthoptic evaluations and management.

The Optometrists Board of the Supplementary Medical Professions Council regulates the profession in Hong Kong.[15] Optometrists are listed in separate parts of the register based on their training and ability. Registrants are subject to restrictions depending on the part they are listed in.[16] Those who pass the examination on refraction conducted by the Board may be registered to Part III, thereby restricted to practice only work related to refraction. Those who have a Higher Certificate in Optometry or have passed the Board's optometry examination may be registered to Part II, thereby restricted in their use of diagnostic agents, but may otherwise practice freely. Part I optometrists may practice without restrictions and generally hold a bachelor's degree or a Professional Diploma.[17]

There are around 2000 optometrists registered in Hong Kong, 1000 of which are Part I.[18] There is one Part I optometrist to about 8000 members of the public. The Polytechnic University runs the only optometry school. It produces around 35 Part I optometrists a year.[19]

In 2010, it was estimated that India needs 115,000 optometrists; whereas India has approximately 9,000 optometrists (4-year trained) and 40,000 optometric assistants/vision technicians (2-year trained).[20] In order to prevent blindness or visual impairment more well trained optometrists are required in India.[21] The definition of optometry differs considerably in different countries of the world.[22] India needs more optometry schools offering four-year degree courses with a syllabus similar to that in force in those countries where practice of optometry is statutorily regulated and well established with an internationally accepted definition.

In 2013, it was reported in the Indian Journal of Ophthalmology that poor spectacle compliance amongst school children in rural Pune resulted in significant vision loss.[23]

In 2015, it was reported in the Optometry and Vision Science that, optometrists need to be more involved in providing core optometry services like binocular vision and low vision.[24]

At present there are more than fifty schools of optometry in India. In the year 1958, two schools of optometry were established, one at Gandhi Eye Hospital, Aligarh in Uttar Pradesh and other one at Sarojini Devi Eye Hospital, Hyderabad in Telangana, under second five-year plan by Director General of Health Services of Government of India. These schools offered diplomas in optometry courses of two years duration validated by State Medical Faculties.

Subsequently, four more schools were opened across India situated at Sitapur Eye Hospital, Sitapur in Uttar Pradesh, Chennai (formerly Madras) in Tamil Nadu, Bengalooru (formerly Bangalore) in Karnataka and Regional Institute of Ophthalmology, Thiruvananthapuram (formerly Trivandrum) in Kerala.[25]

The Elite School of Optometry (ESO) was established in 1985 at Chennai and was the first to offer a four-year degree course.

Academic degrees such as Bachelor of Optometry, Master of Optometry and Doctor of Philosophy in Optometry are awarded in India by the universities recognised by University Grants Commission (India),[26] a statutory body responsible for the maintenance of standards of higher education in India.

Optometrists across India are encouraged to register with the Optometry Council of India, a self-regulatory body registered under the Indian Company Act.[27]

It takes four years to complete a Degree in Optometry. Today, optometry courses are well received by citizens. More universities and higher education studies are about to implement the courses, e.g., National Institute of Ophthalmic Sciences in Petaling Jaya whereby it is the academic arm of The Tun Hussein Onn National Eye Hospital.

Optometry is taught as a five/four-year Doctor/ Bachelors/ Bachelors with Honors course at many institutions notable among which are Department of Optometry & Vision Sciences (DOVS) FAHS, ICBS, Lahore, Pakistan Institute of Community Ophthalmology (PICO) Peshawar, College of Ophthalmology & Allied Vision Sciences (COAVS) Lahore and Al-Shifa Institute of Ophthalmology Islamabad. After graduation the optometrists can join a four-tiered service delivery level (Centre of Excellence, Tertiary/Teaching, District headquarter and sub-district /Tehsil headquarters). M.Phil in Optometry is also available at select institutions such as King Edward Medical University, LahoreDepartment of Optometry & Vision Sciences (DOVS) FAHS, ICBS, Lahore started bridging programmes for Bachelors/ Bachelors with Honors to become Doctor of Optometry OD, Post Professional Doctor of Optometry(PP-OD), Transitional Doctor of Optometry(t-OD).Optometry is not yet a regulated field in Pakistan as there is no professional licensing board or authority responsible for issuing practice licenses to qualified optometrists. This creates difficulty for Pakistani optometrists who wish to register abroad.University of Lahore has recently launched Doctor of optometry (OD).Imam Hussain Medical University also has launched Doctor of Optometry Program. Chairman Imam Hussain Medical University Dr Sabir Hussain Babachan has vowed to regulate OD curriculum according to international standard.

Optometry is regulated by the Professional Regulation Commission of the Philippines. To be eligible for licensing, each candidate must have satisfactorily completed a doctor of optometry course at an accredited institution and demonstrate good moral character with no previous record of professional misconduct. Professional organizations of optometry in the Philippines include Optometric Association of the Philippines[28] and Integrated Philippine Association of Optometrists, Inc. (IPAO).

In Saudi Arabia optometrists must complete a five-year doctor of optometry degree from Qassim University and King Saud University also they must complete a two-year residency .

Tertiary education for optometrists takes 3 years at the following institutions.

Singapore Polytechnic - Diploma in Optometry Singapore Polytechnic

Ngee Ann Polytechnic - Diploma in Optometry Ngee Ann Polytechnic

Since late 1990, Thailand has set goal to provide more than 600 optometrists to meet the minimal public demands and international standards in vision cares. There are more than three university degree programs in Thailand. Each program accept students that have completed grade 12th or the third year in high school (following US education model). These programs offer "Doctor of Optometry" degree to graduates from the program that will take six years to complete the courses. Practicing optometrists will also required to pass licensing examination (three parts examinations) that is administrated through a committee under the Ministry of Public Health.

Nowadays, the number of practicing optometrists in Thailand is still less than one hundred (2015). However, it has projected that the number of practicing optometrists in Thailand will greatly increase within the next ten years. In theoretical scenario, the number of optometrists should be able to meet minimal public demands around 2030 or earlier.

Since the formation of the European Union, "there exists a strong movement, headed by the Association of European Schools and Colleges of Optometry (AESCO), to unify the profession by creating a European-wide examination for optometry" and presumably also standardized practice and education guidelines within EU countries.[29] The first examinations of the new European Diploma in Optometry were held in 1998 and this was a landmark event for optometry in continental Europe.[30]

There is no regulatory framework and optometrists are sometimes trained by completing an apprenticeship at an ophthalmologists' private office.[31]

Optometric tasks are performed by ophthalmologists and professionally trained and certified opticians.

Hellenic Ministry of Education founded the first department of Optometry at Technological Educational Institute of Patras in 2007. After protests from the department of Optics at Technological Educational Institute of Athens (the only department of Optics in Greece, until 2006), the Government changed the names of the departments to "Optics and Optometry" and included lessons in both optics and optometry. Optometrists-Opticians have to complete a 4-year undergraduate honours degree. Then the graduates can be admitted to postgraduate courses in Optometry at universities around the world.

Since 2015, a Master of Science (MSc) course in Optometry is offered by the Technological Educational Institute of Athens.

The Institute of Vision and Optics (IVO) of the University of Crete focuses on the sciences of vision and is active in the fields of research, training, technology development and provision of medical services. Professor Ioannis Pallikaris has received numerous awards and recognitions for the Institute's contribution to ophthalmology. In 1989 he performed the first LASIK procedure on a human eye.

Optometrist education takes 4 years in the medical universities in Hungary, and they will get a Bachelor of Science degree. They work in networks and retail stores and private optics, very few are located in the Health Care care system as ophthalmologists as an assistant.[32]

The profession of Optometry has been represented for over a century by the Association of Optometrists, Ireland [AOI]. In Ireland an optometrist must first complete a four-year degree in optometry at Dublin Institute of Technology. Following successful completion of the degree, an optometrist must then complete professional qualifying examinations to enter the register of the Opticians Board [Bord na Radharcmhaistoiri]. Optometrists must be registered with the Board to practice in the Republic of Ireland.

The A.O.I. runs a comprehensive continuing education and professional development program on behalf of Irish optometrists. The legislation governing optometry was drafted in 1956. Some feel that the legislation restricts optometrists from using their full range of skills, training and equipment for the benefit of the Irish public. The amendment to the Act in 2003 addressed one of the most significant restrictions: the use of cycloplegic drugs to examine children.

In Italy Optometry is unregulated profession. It is taught at seven universities: Padua, Turin, Milan, Salento,[33] Florence, Naples and Rome, as three years course (like a BSc) of "Scienze e tecnologie fisiche" as sector of the Physics Department. Additionally, courses are available at some private institutions (as at Vinci Institute near Firenze) that offer advanced professional education for already qualified opticians (most of the Italian optometrists are also qualified opticians, i.e. "ottico abilitato"). In the last thirty years several verdicts from High Court (Cassazione) proof that optometry is a freely practice and has truly education path.[34]

In Norway, the optometric profession has been regulated as a healthcare profession since 1988. After a three-year bachelor program one can practice basic optometry. At least one year in clinical practice qualify for a post-degree half-year sandwich course in contact lens fitting, which is regulated as a healthcare specialty. A separate regulation for the use of diagnostic drugs in optometric practice was introduced in 2004.

In Russia, optometry education has been accredited by the Federal Agency of Health and Social Development.[citation needed]There are only two educational institutions that teach optometry in Russia: Saint Petersburg Medical Technical College, formerly known as St. Petersburg College of Medical Electronics and Optics, and The Helmholtz Research Institute for Eye Diseases. They both belong and are regulated by the Ministry of Health. The optometry program is a four-year program. It includes one to two science foundation years, one year focused on clinical and proficiency skills, and one year of clinical rotations in hospitals. Graduates take college/state examinations and then receive a specialist diploma. This diploma is valid for only five years and must be renewed every five years after receiving additional training at state accredited programs.

The scope of practice for optometrists in Russia includes: refraction, contact lens fitting, spectacles construction and lens fitting (dispensing), low vision aids, foreign body removal, referrals to other specialists after clinical condition diagnoses (management of diseases in the eye).

Optometrists in the United Kingdom are regulated by the General Optical Council under the Opticians Act 1989 and distinguished from medical practitioners.[35] Registration with the GOC is mandatory to practice optometry in the UK. Members of the College of Optometrists (incorporated by a Royal Charter granted by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II)[36] may use the suffix MCOptom.

The National Health Service provides free sight tests and spectacle vouchers for children and those on very low incomes. The elderly and those with some chronic conditions like diabetes get free periodic tests.[37] Treatment for eye conditions such as glaucoma and cataracts is free and checked for during normal eye examinations.

In the United Kingdom, optometrists have to complete a 3 or 4 (Scotland) year undergraduate honours degree followed by a minimum of a one-year "pre-registration period", (internship), where they complete clinical practice under the supervision of a qualified and experienced practitioner. During this year the pre-registration candidate is given a number of quarterly assessments, often including temporary posting at a hospital, and on successfully passing all of these assessments, a final one-day set of examinations (details correct for candidates from 2006 onwards). Following successful completion of these assessments and having completed one year's supervised practice, the candidate is eligible to register as an optometrist with the General Optical Council (GOC) and, should they so wish, are entitled to membership of the College of Optometrists. Twelve universities offer Optometry in the UK: Anglia Ruskin, Aston, Bradford, Cardiff, City, Glasgow Caledonian, Hertfordshire, Manchester, University of Plymouth, Ulster University at Coleraine, University of Portsmouth and University of the West of England, Bristol.

In 2008 the UK moved forward to offer the Doctor of Optometry postgraduate program. This became available at the Institute of Optometry in London in partnership with London South Bank University.[38][39] The Doctor of Optometry post graduate degree is also offered at one other UK institution.Aston University

In 1990, a survey of the opinions of British medical practitioners regarding the services provided by British optometrists was carried out by Agarwal[40] at City, University of London. A majority of respondents were in favour of optometrists extending their professional role by treating external eye conditions and prescribing broad spectrum topical antibiotics through additional training and certification.

Since 2009, optometrists in the UK have been able to undertake additional postgraduate training and qualifications that allow them to prescribe medications to treat and manage eye conditions.[41] There are currently three registerable specialties:

In Canada, Doctors of Optometry (O.D.) typically complete four years of undergraduate studies followed by four to five years of optometry studies, accredited by the Accreditation Council on Optometric Education. There are two such schools of optometry located in Canadathe University of Waterloo and the Universit de Montreal. Canada also recognizes degrees from the twenty US schools.

In Canada, Doctors of Optometry must write national written and practical board exams. Additionally, optometrists are required to become licensed in the province in which they wish to practice. Regulatory of professions is within provincial jurisdiction. Therefore, regulation of optometry is unique to individual provinces and territories. In Ontario, optometrists are licensed by the College of Optometrists of Ontario.

In Canada, the profession is represented by the Canadian Association of Optometrists. In the province of Ontario, the Ontario Association of Optometrists is the designated representative of optometrists to the provincial government.

Optometrists in Canada are trained and licensed to be primary eye care providers. They provide optical and medical eye care. They are able to diagnose and treat most eye diseases and can prescribe both topical and oral medications[43]

Doctors of Optometry (O.D.) (optometrists) usually function as primary eye care providers. They provide comprehensive optical and medical eye care, but usually not surgery. They are trained and licensed to prescribe all topical medications (prescription eye drops), most oral medications, as well as administer diagnostic agents.[44][45][46] In some states, optometrists may also be licensed to perform certain types of eye surgery.[47]

Doctors of Optometry (O.D.) (optometrists) may prescribe corrective lenses (glasses and contacts) to aid refractive errors (e.g., myopia, hyperopia, presbyopia, astigmatism, double vision (prism)). They manage vision development in children including amblyopia diagnosis/treatment or vision therapy. They are trained and state licensed to diagnose and manage all ocular diseases (ophthalmology - branch of medicine diagnosing and treating eye disease) and their associations with systemic health. Common eye conditions managed include: infections (bacterial/viral), allergy, inflammation (uveitis), diabetic retinopathy, macular degeneration etc. They can also remove ocular foreign bodies and can order blood panels or imaging studies (CT/MRI). However, optometrists are not trained to perform invasive surgery (ie. cataract/retina surgery) like ophthalmologists are. However, In Oklahoma and Louisiana, optometrists may perform minor surgeries within the anterior segment of the eye. Moreover, Kentucky[when?] legislation permits optometrists to perform certain laser procedures.

Opticians are not doctors, however they are an important part of eye care. They are trained and licensed to cut, fit and adjust eyeglass frames/lenses. They are experts in lens types and wearing modalities.

Ophthalmologists are Doctors of Medicine (MD/DO) who specialize in the eye. While ophthalmologists can prescribe corrective lenses, they usually manage complicated/advanced eye disease and invasive surgeries/injections that are associated with these diseases (specialty care). In modern times, ophthalmologists usually specialize in a particular area of the eye or eye care such as the cornea, glaucoma, strabismus, retina.

Doctors of optometry in the United States are regulated by state boards, which vary from state to state. The Association of Regulatory Boards of Optometry (ARBO) assists these state board licensing agencies in regulating the practice of optometry.

Optometrists must complete all course work and graduate from an accredited College of Optometry. This includes passage of all parts of the national board examinations as well as local jurisprudence examinations, which vary by state.

Doctors of Optometry (O.D.) (Optometric physician / Optometrist) typically complete four years of undergraduate studies followed by four years of eye specific training (Optometry school) plus an optional year of study in a specialty area (residency). The program includes intense classroom and clinical training in geometric, physical, physiological and ophthalmic optics, specialty contact lens evaluation and fitting, general anatomy, ocular anatomy, ocular disease, pharmacology, ocular pharmacology, neuroanatomy and neurophysiology of the visual system, pediatric visual development, gerontology, binocular vision, color vision, form, space, movement and vision perception, systemic disease, histology, microbiology, sensory and perceptual psychology, biochemistry, statistics and epidemiology.

Admission to Optometry school is very competitive. Applicants must take the Optometry Admission Test (OAT) and have excellent undergraduate grades to apply. To graduate, candidates must pass all three parts of the National Board of Examiners of Optometry (NBEO). Part 1 NBEO is a two-day written exam. Part 2 is a computer based exam, takes all day and is based on clinical studies including the treatment and management of ocular disease. Part three is a practical exam that must be taken in person in North Carolina. Once a candidate has successfully completed all applicable coursework, clinical rotations, passed all parts of NBEO exams, and satisfied all financial obligations (US$225,000), a Doctor of Optometry degree will be conferred.

Optometrists are required to perform many hours of continuing education over a variety of medical topics each year, in order to renew their license.

Australia currently has five recognized courses in optometry, and one course seeking to obtain accreditation with the Optometry council of Australia and New Zealand:

To support these courses the Australian College of Optometry provides clinical placements to undergraduate students from Australian Universities and abroad.

in 2016, almost 5000 optometrists in general practice were licensed with their regulatory body, the Optometry Board of Australia. Of these, approximately 2300 were registered with the scheduled medicines endorsement, which enables them to prescribe some medicines for the treatment of conditions of the eye.[49]

New Zealand currently has one recognised course in optometry:

In July 2014, the Medicines Amendment Act 2013 and Misuse of Drugs Amendment Regulations 2014 came into effect. Among other things, the changes to the Act name optometrists as authorised prescribers. This change enables optometrists with a therapeutic pharmaceutical agent (TPA) endorsement to prescribe all medicines appropriate to their scope of practice, rather than limiting them to a list of medicines specified in regulation; this recognises the safe and appropriate prescribing practice of optometrists over the previous nine years.[50]

The Brazilian Government does not state rules about optometry, and the Brazilian Council of Ophthalmology recommends against its official legal recognition.[citation needed]

The CBOO (Brazilian Council of Optics and Optometry), which is affiliated to the WCO (World Council of Optometry), represents Brazilian optometrists. In conjunction with organizations representative weight of Brazilian companies, including the National Commerce Confederation for goods, services and tourism (CNC), through the CBptica/CNC, its defense arm of optometric and optical industry, are defending the right of free and independent practice of optometrists, even if it is against the interests of ophthalmologists.

The Federal Supreme Court (STF), the Brazilian Court of Justice and the Superior Court of Justice (STJ), another important National Court, ruled several processes granting inquestionable victories to ophthalmologists.

In Brazilian law, however, there is an explicit recommendation that the one prescribing corrective lenses are prohibited to sell them. This restricting rule to the ophthalmologists has keeping the optic shops away from Hospitals and Eye Care Clinics since 1930, and it has to be reviewed before any further regulation for the optometrists.

In Colombia, optometry education has been accredited by the Ministry of Health. The last official revision to the laws regarding healthcare standards in the country was issued in 1992 through the Law 30.[51] Currently there are eight official universities that are entitled by ICFES to grant the optometrist certification. The first optometrists arrived in the country from North America and Europe circa 1914. These professionals specialized in optics and refraction. In 1933, under Decrees 449 and 1291, the Colombian Government officially set the rules for the formation of professionals in the field of optometry. In 1966 La Salle University opened its first Faculty of Optometry after recommendation from a group of professionals. At the present time optometrists are encouraged to keep up with new technologies through congresses and scholarships granted by the government or the private sector (such as Bausch & Lomb).

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UV Eye Protection | The Vision Council

Wednesday, October 2nd, 2019

The sun emits three kinds of ultraviolet radiation: UVA, UVB and UVC. While UVC is absorbed by the Earths atmosphere, UVB radiation is only partially blocked and can burn the skin and eyes. UVA rays are not filtered and cause the most damage to vision health, according to the World Health Organization.

The Vision Councils most recent VisionWatch survey reveals American adults experience symptoms like irritation in the eye (15.5 percent), trouble seeing (13.5 percent), wrinkles around the eye (8.3 percent), red or swollen eyes (5.9 percent), sunburn on the eyelids (3.7 percent), sunburn of the eye (2.5 percent) and cancer on or around the eye (.6 percent) from prolonged UV exposure. Additionally, the most common time American adults report spending time outdoors is 2-4 p.m. (39.8 percent), and the number one thing that concerns them most about UV eye exposure is vision loss (28.2 percent). However, 27 percent report they dont typically wear sunglasses when they are outside.

Additional findings show:

Q: Does the darkness of the lenses equate to higher UV protection?A: No. However, 39.4 percent of American adults believe it does. Dark lenses without adequate UV protection can be worse than wearing no sunglasses at all because they cause the eye's pupil to dilate, which then increases retinal exposure to unfiltered UV.

Q: Do all sunglasses offer UVA/UVB protection?A: No. Since shielding the eyes from damaging radiation is crucial, it is imperative to look for a label, sticker or tag indicating UV protection before purchasing a pair of sunglasses.

Q: When do UV rays affect the eyes?A: UV radiation is present year-round, so despite the season or weather. So it's important to wear proper eye and skin protection while outside during daylight hours.

Q: What should be considered when purchasing a pair of sunglasses?A: Protection, daily activities, comfort and personal style.

The Vision Council encourages everyone to wear sunglasses whenever they're outdoors during daylight hours, and to have an annual eye exam with an eyecare provider. Only 27 percent of American adults report they have an annual eye exam and talk to their eyecare provider about UV eye protection, and 29.7 percent report their child(ren) has an annual eye exam and talk to their eyecare provider about their UV eye protection. However, eyecare providers can make recommendations regarding sunglasses tailored to an individuals unique vision and lifestyle needs. Additionally, sunglasses are also considered a style accessory that can elevate any look! Individuals should start a collection to coincide with their varying activities and ever-changing wardrobes.

Don't forget to celebrate National Sunglasses Day on June 27 by posting a photo with your favorite sunglasses tagging @TheVisionCouncil, and using #NationalSunglassesDay and #SunglassSelfie. For more information, visit nationalsunglassesday.com.

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UV Eye Protection | The Vision Council

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The Center For Sight: Lufkin TX Eye Care Surgery, Lenses …

Wednesday, October 2nd, 2019

The Center For Sight: Lufkin TX Eye Care Surgery, Lenses & More Our desire is to be your trusted choice in eye care.

Welcome to The Center For Sight

In 1981, Dr. Richard J. Ruckman opened The Center For Sights first location in Lufkin, Texas with a vision to provide his patients with high-level eye care through enhanced technology, skilled professionals and his personal commitment to excellence. Since then, The Center For Sight has grown to serve East Texas with its main office in Lufkin ,and satellite office in Livingston.

The mission of The Center For Sight has been, Our Focus is You! We strive to make our patients feel like our family and to provide all levels of eye care, including eye examinations, contact lens evaluations and fittings, complex medical evaluations, cataract surgery and prescription glasses. Our team of doctors and staff is among the finest, and we work hard to preserve and improve the vision and health of each and every one of our patients. Our desire is to be your trusted choice in eye care. Welcome to The Center For Sight!

Visit Both of Our Locations!

We have two locations for your convenience. Located in Lufkin and Livingston, we're ready to provide you with an exceptional experience, no matter which location you visit! Get quality eye care, whether you need contact lenses or eye surgery. Call today to schedule an appointment!

Need Prescription Sunglasses?

Invest in a pair of stylish prescription sunglasses at The Center for Sight! We'll make sure your pair of sunglasses fit perfectly to your face, giving you full comfort. Our sunglasses are built to perform, with the best quality and brands.

2 Medical Center Blvd.Lufkin, TX 75904

Call UsPhone 1: (936) 634- 8434Phone 2: (800) 833-5777

HoursMon: 8:00AM-5:00PMTue: 8:00AM-7:00PMWed: 8:00AM-5:00PMThu: 8:00AM-5:00PMFri: 8:00am-12:30pmSat: ClosedSun: Closed

SEE ALL LOCATIONS

200 Ogletree DriveLivingston, TX 77351

Call UsPhone 1: (936) 328-5600Phone 2: (800) 734-9086

HoursMon: 8:00AM-5:00PMTue: 8:00AM-7:00PMWed: 8:00AM-5:00PMThu: 8:00AM-5:00PMFri: 8:00am-12:30pmSat: ClosedSun: Closed

SEE ALL LOCATIONS

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The Center For Sight: Lufkin TX Eye Care Surgery, Lenses ...

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