- Joined
- Jul 27, 2005
- Messages
- 614
- Reaction score
- 32
WARNING: Long-winded verbiage; do not read if you're pressed for time, have a life, or do not expect to live much longer.
I've been posting on SDN for about 3 years now, give or take, and in that time, I have had both civil and non-civil discussions about various professions. When I first started here, I was a vocal critic of my own profession, psychiatry. Having seen my specialty decline into the quagmire of known medical specialties, for various reasons, and realizing that I spent 4 years of medical school and 4 years of residency preparing myself for a lifetime of 15-20 minute medication reviews, I began posting on SDN as a way to vent and connect with other dissatisfied psychiatrists. Soon, I began to wander into other fora (psychology, pharm, opto, etc.) and found many other professionals in the same boat as me: looking for love in all the wrong places/unhappy with their career choices/looking for something else.
I honed in on the optometry forum for a few reasons. First, I noticed that more optos than pharms, psychologists, dentists, etc., were unhappy with their chosen profession and posting their frustration. Second, I had two patients who were deeply unhappy about their personal and professional lives; one was a chiropractor who eventually became a high school history teacher and the other, a former optometrist who now works as a PA. The optometrist, a middle-aged guy with two teenagers and a harpy of a wife, was so unhappy with his career, and so bored, he created an active fantasy life for himself and frequently posed an OMD surgeon. In fact, when his mother-in-law was hospitalized with nephrotic syndrome, he actually tried to tell the attending how to treat her and almost got himself in serious legal trouble. He frequently "played doctor". The genesis of his problem was profound regret at not getting into Wayne State for medical school like his brothers and father. He resented optometry, which was merely a fallback career for him, and coveted the life of a physician. Having worked with him for 3 years, I learned a great deal of his PERSONAL SUBJECTIVE view of your profession. When I came to SDN, I saw some of the same patterns in the OD forum.
Many of you on this forum seem to think I'm a rabid anti-Optometrite. Am I really? Am I a true critic of a profession I admittedly know very little about? No, I am not. Do I really give a rat's ass about what an OD does or does not do? No, I do not. I do not feel ODs are a threat to me personally or anyone in either of my professions. Optometry will never displace psychiatry or law, and in my opinion, it will never displace or replace ophthalmology.
My true problem is not with the professional optometrists who post on this board (except IndianaOD who seems to think he graduated from medical school). It is with the students and college students who have yet to enter the profession (e.g., oculomotor, gochi, and a plethora of others) who entered a profession for the wrong reasons: (1) doctoral title; (2) perceived status/prestige; (3) respect; (4) look cool in a white coat. These students seem to want a back-door entry into the practice of medicine. They seem to be under the impression, much like their chiropractic friends, that they are going to become physicians upon graduation from optometry school and will have a happy, prosperous career ahead of them. Will they? Graduation from any school does not guarantee happiness. Do you know how many MDs and DOs out there are unhappy in their careers? MANY!!!
I think optometry has many benefits over ANY branch of allopathic or osteopathic medicine. Whether you choose retail or clinical optometry, once you finish your education in 4 years, you are done! You do NOT have to undergo clinical rotations in areas where you wouldn't wish your worst enemy to work (e.g., OB-GYN, general surgery, geriatrics). You do NOT have to undergo internship or MANDATORY PGY residency training. In just four years of OD school, you actually learn how to do your job and do it well. On the MD side of the coin, medical school gives us a tiny portion of the knowledge we need to practice; it's the PGY training that teaches us how to actually do what we do and do it well!
If you guys want to do a residency, it's one year and highly focused: contact lenses, primary care, etc. You don't spend your nights on call. You don't have to insert your hands into someone's mouth, rectum, or vagina. You don't have to worry about blood, vomit, feces, or other bodily fluids. You don't have to watch people suffering and dying. Yes, even a lowly psychiatrist has done all of this. I also did a residency in IM. I saw a 14-year-old boy die in his mother's arms due to CLL. I've seen MVAs so bad, the victims were barely recognizable as human beings. I've seen patients of mine die from self-inflicted wounds in the ER.
An optometrist has a career and a life. A physician, in the US, does not; he/she has a life and it often becomes intertwined with career. You bring the gift of sight into people's lives. NO ONE is ever afraid to come see you. Even little kids don't fear ODs. No one enjoys going to the dentist. No one enjoys going to a doctor's office. Most people hate having to hire a lawyer. Seeing a shrink isn't usually the top of the list of "things I wanna do today" for most people. Getting a new pair of specs and seeing the friendly, kindly neighbourhood eye doctor is something that most people have no problem doing. No blood, no pain, minimal inconvenience. No waiting. No nasty tests. You rarely have to deliver horrible news to patients. How many ODs really get sued for malpractice? What is your malpractice cost? How many of you optometrists have to testify in court for PROFESSIONAL matters? How many of your patients call you up at 4:00 am after ODing on Xanax or SSRI de jour? How many of your patients sue you because their husband decided to impregnate his niece and blame you for it?
You guys have a great job when you think about it. Yes, it would be nice if your jobs were more "medical" and it would be nice if you could be more like doctors, but there is simply no need for ODs to fill that role or enter that niche. Why compare your profession to dentistry or podiatry? Why compare it to ophthalmology? There is a reason why optometry school grants the OD degree and not the MD or DDS or DPM or whatever degree. You are not dentists, nor are you like dentists. Dentistry and podiatry are actual offshoots of allopathic medicine. Optometry is not and never was; its roots are completely non-medical and evolved over the years.
My point is, be glad you are part of a unique and respectable profession. NO ONE hates optometrists. No one fears optometrists. No one dreads going to see the optometrist. No one dies in your care and your liability is minimal. You meet lots of people and provide a valuable service. No one except you and your mother will give a rat's ass that you are a "doctor". Butchers wear white coats too. Your degree and training may be quite advanced, and you may know a lot when you graduate, but in reality, you'll forget most of it once you begin doing whatever it is you will mostly do. Yes, you are trained. Yes, you know pharmacology and anatomy. No, you are not physicians. No, you are not surgeons. No, you are not LIKE dentists or podiatrists or pharmacists or any other profession. You are an optometrist. If you need to compare your profession to another, audiology is the closest there is to comparison. If, however, you compare and covet the trappings of other professions (e.g., dentistry and medicine), go to medical school or dental school. DO NOT enter optometry because you couldn't get into medical or dental school. DO NOT enter optometry because being called DOCTOR is cool. Enter optometry because you want to be an optometrist. How hard is that to understand?
Many of you, like qopty, KHE, hello07, and a few others, know your professional strengths and weaknesses, know your training, and are happy with your career choice. I see common sense and true professionalism in their postings. Others are delusional, disgruntled, and overly critical. If you are unhappy in your personal life, you will be unhappy in your professional life. If you are unhappy in your professional life, why? Ask yourself why and seriously attempt to answer the question. The next question should be, "what can I do to make my job/career better/more exciting?" Think about it. Sometimes the answer will surprise you. Sometimes it won't. If you find yourself unhappy, explore and weigh your options. Even if you are older, it's NEVER too late to change, evolve, or try something new. I'm 37. I went from doctor to lawyer once I asked myself that question, "what can I do to make my life better?" At that time, I was 30 and barely out of residency. If my lazy ass can do it, so can you. KHE left optometry to teach high school, if my memory serves. Ask him about change! If you're an OD and unhappy, what about academia? What about consulting? Go back and get an MBA and do optometric management! Get an MSW and be a social worker. There is so much you can do with your degree besides practice. You can teach at the college level, work for government agencies, work for insurance companies, go into management and consulting, etc. If you have a family and student loans, then your options are more limited, but still...do what you have to make life interesting before it becomes too late.
I wish someone had told me this back in 1992 when I entered medical school. I wish I had entered medical school for the right reasons. If you go through your professional life saying "what if" all the time, you'll never be happy. Avoid EPIC FAIL and do what you want to do in the first place.
I've been posting on SDN for about 3 years now, give or take, and in that time, I have had both civil and non-civil discussions about various professions. When I first started here, I was a vocal critic of my own profession, psychiatry. Having seen my specialty decline into the quagmire of known medical specialties, for various reasons, and realizing that I spent 4 years of medical school and 4 years of residency preparing myself for a lifetime of 15-20 minute medication reviews, I began posting on SDN as a way to vent and connect with other dissatisfied psychiatrists. Soon, I began to wander into other fora (psychology, pharm, opto, etc.) and found many other professionals in the same boat as me: looking for love in all the wrong places/unhappy with their career choices/looking for something else.
I honed in on the optometry forum for a few reasons. First, I noticed that more optos than pharms, psychologists, dentists, etc., were unhappy with their chosen profession and posting their frustration. Second, I had two patients who were deeply unhappy about their personal and professional lives; one was a chiropractor who eventually became a high school history teacher and the other, a former optometrist who now works as a PA. The optometrist, a middle-aged guy with two teenagers and a harpy of a wife, was so unhappy with his career, and so bored, he created an active fantasy life for himself and frequently posed an OMD surgeon. In fact, when his mother-in-law was hospitalized with nephrotic syndrome, he actually tried to tell the attending how to treat her and almost got himself in serious legal trouble. He frequently "played doctor". The genesis of his problem was profound regret at not getting into Wayne State for medical school like his brothers and father. He resented optometry, which was merely a fallback career for him, and coveted the life of a physician. Having worked with him for 3 years, I learned a great deal of his PERSONAL SUBJECTIVE view of your profession. When I came to SDN, I saw some of the same patterns in the OD forum.
Many of you on this forum seem to think I'm a rabid anti-Optometrite. Am I really? Am I a true critic of a profession I admittedly know very little about? No, I am not. Do I really give a rat's ass about what an OD does or does not do? No, I do not. I do not feel ODs are a threat to me personally or anyone in either of my professions. Optometry will never displace psychiatry or law, and in my opinion, it will never displace or replace ophthalmology.
My true problem is not with the professional optometrists who post on this board (except IndianaOD who seems to think he graduated from medical school). It is with the students and college students who have yet to enter the profession (e.g., oculomotor, gochi, and a plethora of others) who entered a profession for the wrong reasons: (1) doctoral title; (2) perceived status/prestige; (3) respect; (4) look cool in a white coat. These students seem to want a back-door entry into the practice of medicine. They seem to be under the impression, much like their chiropractic friends, that they are going to become physicians upon graduation from optometry school and will have a happy, prosperous career ahead of them. Will they? Graduation from any school does not guarantee happiness. Do you know how many MDs and DOs out there are unhappy in their careers? MANY!!!
I think optometry has many benefits over ANY branch of allopathic or osteopathic medicine. Whether you choose retail or clinical optometry, once you finish your education in 4 years, you are done! You do NOT have to undergo clinical rotations in areas where you wouldn't wish your worst enemy to work (e.g., OB-GYN, general surgery, geriatrics). You do NOT have to undergo internship or MANDATORY PGY residency training. In just four years of OD school, you actually learn how to do your job and do it well. On the MD side of the coin, medical school gives us a tiny portion of the knowledge we need to practice; it's the PGY training that teaches us how to actually do what we do and do it well!
If you guys want to do a residency, it's one year and highly focused: contact lenses, primary care, etc. You don't spend your nights on call. You don't have to insert your hands into someone's mouth, rectum, or vagina. You don't have to worry about blood, vomit, feces, or other bodily fluids. You don't have to watch people suffering and dying. Yes, even a lowly psychiatrist has done all of this. I also did a residency in IM. I saw a 14-year-old boy die in his mother's arms due to CLL. I've seen MVAs so bad, the victims were barely recognizable as human beings. I've seen patients of mine die from self-inflicted wounds in the ER.
An optometrist has a career and a life. A physician, in the US, does not; he/she has a life and it often becomes intertwined with career. You bring the gift of sight into people's lives. NO ONE is ever afraid to come see you. Even little kids don't fear ODs. No one enjoys going to the dentist. No one enjoys going to a doctor's office. Most people hate having to hire a lawyer. Seeing a shrink isn't usually the top of the list of "things I wanna do today" for most people. Getting a new pair of specs and seeing the friendly, kindly neighbourhood eye doctor is something that most people have no problem doing. No blood, no pain, minimal inconvenience. No waiting. No nasty tests. You rarely have to deliver horrible news to patients. How many ODs really get sued for malpractice? What is your malpractice cost? How many of you optometrists have to testify in court for PROFESSIONAL matters? How many of your patients call you up at 4:00 am after ODing on Xanax or SSRI de jour? How many of your patients sue you because their husband decided to impregnate his niece and blame you for it?
You guys have a great job when you think about it. Yes, it would be nice if your jobs were more "medical" and it would be nice if you could be more like doctors, but there is simply no need for ODs to fill that role or enter that niche. Why compare your profession to dentistry or podiatry? Why compare it to ophthalmology? There is a reason why optometry school grants the OD degree and not the MD or DDS or DPM or whatever degree. You are not dentists, nor are you like dentists. Dentistry and podiatry are actual offshoots of allopathic medicine. Optometry is not and never was; its roots are completely non-medical and evolved over the years.
My point is, be glad you are part of a unique and respectable profession. NO ONE hates optometrists. No one fears optometrists. No one dreads going to see the optometrist. No one dies in your care and your liability is minimal. You meet lots of people and provide a valuable service. No one except you and your mother will give a rat's ass that you are a "doctor". Butchers wear white coats too. Your degree and training may be quite advanced, and you may know a lot when you graduate, but in reality, you'll forget most of it once you begin doing whatever it is you will mostly do. Yes, you are trained. Yes, you know pharmacology and anatomy. No, you are not physicians. No, you are not surgeons. No, you are not LIKE dentists or podiatrists or pharmacists or any other profession. You are an optometrist. If you need to compare your profession to another, audiology is the closest there is to comparison. If, however, you compare and covet the trappings of other professions (e.g., dentistry and medicine), go to medical school or dental school. DO NOT enter optometry because you couldn't get into medical or dental school. DO NOT enter optometry because being called DOCTOR is cool. Enter optometry because you want to be an optometrist. How hard is that to understand?
Many of you, like qopty, KHE, hello07, and a few others, know your professional strengths and weaknesses, know your training, and are happy with your career choice. I see common sense and true professionalism in their postings. Others are delusional, disgruntled, and overly critical. If you are unhappy in your personal life, you will be unhappy in your professional life. If you are unhappy in your professional life, why? Ask yourself why and seriously attempt to answer the question. The next question should be, "what can I do to make my job/career better/more exciting?" Think about it. Sometimes the answer will surprise you. Sometimes it won't. If you find yourself unhappy, explore and weigh your options. Even if you are older, it's NEVER too late to change, evolve, or try something new. I'm 37. I went from doctor to lawyer once I asked myself that question, "what can I do to make my life better?" At that time, I was 30 and barely out of residency. If my lazy ass can do it, so can you. KHE left optometry to teach high school, if my memory serves. Ask him about change! If you're an OD and unhappy, what about academia? What about consulting? Go back and get an MBA and do optometric management! Get an MSW and be a social worker. There is so much you can do with your degree besides practice. You can teach at the college level, work for government agencies, work for insurance companies, go into management and consulting, etc. If you have a family and student loans, then your options are more limited, but still...do what you have to make life interesting before it becomes too late.
I wish someone had told me this back in 1992 when I entered medical school. I wish I had entered medical school for the right reasons. If you go through your professional life saying "what if" all the time, you'll never be happy. Avoid EPIC FAIL and do what you want to do in the first place.
Last edited: