KHE said:
Why don't you share your experience with respect to what you were expecting vs what you got?
What did you think your career was going to be like, and what questions do you now think you should have asked or what things do you wish you had known about before you got involved?
i initally shadowed a well established OD group in a rural area with had a large practice. practices, i should say, which included their monopoly of a 150 mile radius. nearly every sizeable town had one of their offices in it. at that time, i did not know corporate optometry was such a factor. again, my own fault. anyways, this OD group that i shadowed was very thorough, and ran their practices like a professional healthcare office. opticians were certified, technicians were certified, some of which were LPNs. truly, they were primary eye care doctors, having a working relationship with a surgeon who would travel to their office to perform surgery and surgical consults. to me, this looked like the ticket. i assumed optometry was like this nearly everywhere (you know what happens when you assume) - respectable, having a good and symbiotic relationship with MDs, financially rewarding, etc. so, i didnt venture outside their 150 mile radius to shadow any other ODs. i first met these ODs in my first year of undergrad, and soon i was taking the OAT, and i also decided to take the MCAT, as i had shadowed a local family physician and had some desire to consider that option. i applied to two optometry schools and two med schools, assuming (see above on this word) that my acceptance to any or either would determine my fate. i was accepted into all four schools. i thought and thought about which to choose. looking at the rural (and i mean rural) family docs, i found their place in healthcare to be intrigueing, but what bothered me is the fact that they had super strong relationships with the people they treated. seriously, i wondered how it would be if i were in their shoes and went to the local gas station and saw the guy i just treated for genital herpes. or just did a colonoscopy on. the list goes on. the images of the superbusy, super professional offices of the ODs offices i shadowed took over. i chose optometry school.
5 years later, one month into practice in a large city, i realized that their was a commercial optometry "store" on every corner, fully equipped with salespeople calling themselves opticians and technicians. the smaller private ODs were basically older ODs who resisted change, and were literally just refracting opticians. so we have two megamajority groups in optometry giving us a bad name. not enough ODs doing primary eye care.
my reasons for wishing i chose a different profession are not because i do not like what optometry is trained to do - i just do not like what it is starting to become and there is nothing i can do about it except run my practice like a primary eye care clinic, communicating and working with who i believe should be our allies - ophthalmology, and in my spare time going on forums like this one and taking shots at corporate optometry to make me feel better.
so my advice is:
-if you want to be a physician and practice with full medical authority and respect (as a physician rightly deserves) - dont become an OD, dentist, DPM, etc, and especially do not become a nurse practicioner, or physician's assistant.
-if you want to be a doctoral health care provider that is respected for your place in healthcare, but do not want to be a physician, consider dental, DPM.
-if you want to be a doctoral health care provider that is quickly losing respect due to corporate influence, and overagressive push for surgical rights, and older practitioners who refuse to educate themselves for primary eye care, and those who cannot see that working with other health care providers (such as ophthalmology) is beneficial, consider optometry.
- i have little knowledge on pharmacy, DVM, so i dare not make assumptions.
bitter, arent i.