WTF is going on here....
Like most industries, primary eye care is getting to the point where it is hard to make a really good living just being a doctor. Vision plans are drying up thanks to ACA minimum standards, and compensation for exams/testing from Medicare and Medicaid go down every year (and insurance rates are pegged to those rates). For really successful optometrists most of their profit comes from the dispensary, not providing care. The few that I know who make six figures all have high-pressure sales tactics related to designer frames or have some of of payroll MD fly in and do surgeries for them.
That is not the real crime though. The real crime is the optometrists that won't mention treatment options like LASIK or multifocal lenses (or worse scare you away from them) because they want that gravy train of making you glasses to keep coming in. Or they won't refer a glaucoma patient for SLT treatment because they want the regular checkups to continue (even if that means the patient pays thousands of dollars a year in drop costs).
Primary eye care is just like dentistry, done by "doctors" with a minimal amount of training or moral brainwashing. What scares me is that some states are flirting with the idea of allowing optometrists of being able to perform laser procedures like SLTs and LASIK basically to drive down what they have to compensate real doctors. At that point the overall quality of eye care will be close to the overall quality of the used car sales industry.
I ordered my first pair of glasses ever online a few months ago.
Stop. The. Presses.
I only paid about $140 for an entire set. The last time I went to just get my lenses updated, it was $200. And insurance covered it!
Luckily, I've also been blind for my entire life so know my prescription very well and what my frame measurements are. Having past prescriptions and a body that hasn't grown much in over a decade helps too -- I just got the pupillary distance off an old prescription.
The annoying thing is that you have to know how to adjust your own glasses -- or if you don't care, you can walk into a store and ask. I learned to do it with 2 pairs of $300 Maui Jims and 1 pair of $150 Ray Bans in the past.
Yea, I noticed that when I get my prescription I have to ASK for my PD every single time. They always leave it out for some odd reason...
Has absolutely nothing to do with ACA or any other recent political developments.
The reason prices have been astronomical is because pricing and comparative information to the average consumer has not been transparent.
Here's the deal. I have VSP. It's 10 for exam and they pretty much over most of the frame, but they only cover basic polycarb lens. Therefore I spend a additional 100 or more for lens. So I get one pair of basic frame and higher lens for around 120 (with tax).
Most people don't know this, but one Italian company has a monopoly on eyewear (glasses + sunglasses)... not only that, but they own most of the most popular eyeglass/sunglass stores (aka vertical integration):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDdq2rIqAlM
Most eyewear is overpriced, as a result.
Yea, I noticed that when I get my prescription I have to ASK for my PD every single time. They always leave it out for some odd reason...
yeap. wich is why it really does not matter where you go. those laughing at walmart eye doctor are insane. they are just as well trained and you get glass's FAR cheaper.
My Walmart doctor was a weirdo. She was getting *very* excited over correctly narrowing down my prescription, and then told me I needed bifocals, even after saying I didn't want them. She went as far as laying a guilt trip on me about spending time to get the bifocal part right, and now I wasn't gonna take them. I seriously thought she wouldn't let me leave without bifocals :^/
While she's technically correct, I can see up close without glasses, and don't want changes part way into the lens. I require my eyes for work, and I need to be able to see clearly at all angles for distance more than anything. I'm fine with taking them off, or looking over the top to see close.
As long as the glasses turn out right, I can deal with the weirdness of the doctor, but the whole thing was kind of unsettling.
My Walmart doctor was a weirdo. She was getting *very* excited over correctly narrowing down my prescription, and then told me I needed bifocals, even after saying I didn't want them. She went as far as laying a guilt trip on me about spending time to get the bifocal part right, and now I wasn't gonna take them. I seriously thought she wouldn't let me leave without bifocals :^/
While she's technically correct, I can see up close without glasses, and don't want changes part way into the lens. I require my eyes for work, and I need to be able to see clearly at all angles for distance more than anything. I'm fine with taking them off, or looking over the top to see close.
As long as the glasses turn out right, I can deal with the weirdness of the doctor, but the whole thing was kind of unsettling.
vsp is garbage. it's known to be an insurance under name only.
yeap. wich is why it really does not matter where you go. those laughing at walmart eye doctor are insane. they are just as well trained and you get glass's FAR cheaper. though they are still higher then online.
last eye exam i had they REFUSED to give it to me.
WAHHHH
is that PD really necessary? I got a prescription from an eyeglasses store, and ended up buying a pair from a different store. They didn't need any other number, nor did they measure or do whatever the fuck. Why do the online sites ask?
but really, WAHHHH some more
Vision Insurance for the win. Free pair a year.
Since when does eye insurance actually do anything other than maybe cover some of the exam? I'm sure there are plans out there, but most people's eye insurance nothing more than what amounts to a 25% coupon. Off of regular price.
How much do you pay for your vision insurance? If it's anything above $0.00, then your glasses ain't free.
Like most industries, primary eye care is getting to the point where it is hard to make a really good living just being a doctor. Vision plans are drying up thanks to ACA minimum standards, and compensation for exams/testing from Medicare and Medicaid go down every year (and insurance rates are pegged to those rates). For really successful optometrists most of their profit comes from the dispensary, not providing care. The few that I know who make six figures all have high-pressure sales tactics related to designer frames or have some of of payroll MD fly in and do surgeries for them.
That is not the real crime though. The real crime is the optometrists that won't mention treatment options like LASIK or multifocal lenses (or worse scare you away from them) because they want that gravy train of making you glasses to keep coming in. Or they won't refer a glaucoma patient for SLT treatment because they want the regular checkups to continue (even if that means the patient pays thousands of dollars a year in drop costs).
Primary eye care is just like dentistry, done by "doctors" with a minimal amount of training or moral brainwashing. What scares me is that some states are flirting with the idea of allowing optometrists of being able to perform laser procedures like SLTs and LASIK basically to drive down what they have to compensate real doctors. At that point the overall quality of eye care will be close to the overall quality of the used car sales industry.