- Joined
- Oct 16, 2008
- Messages
- 54
- Reaction score
- 0
In our quest to educate prospective students about the flat out lies being perpetuated by the AOA and optometric community, we have started a public relations organization to directly challenge the AOA and optometric colleges. We are currently raising advertising funds in order to make the public and students aware of:
- The six figure (on average) student loan debt they will incur.
- The very little ocular disease they will see on a daily basis.
- Optometrists are barred from medical plans in many states.
- Optometrists are not permitted hospital privleges in many states.
- How underqualified they are to treat ocular disease (unless residency
trained), due to not seeing it that much.
- How much their skills will erode after graduation, by not using them and
mainly doing refractions.
- How they are being used as a revenue source for corporate optical
chains and those working there are driving their fellow optometrists in
private practice out of business.
- How unrealistic it is to believe that a new grad will start a practice,
being barred from medical plans, having six figure student loan debt,
retail competition and oversaturation of the marketplace by an influx of
new grads.
- How many new grads will sadly have to work in a retail setting in order
to start making payments on that six figure loan debt.
- How very few patients, (especially in Ca and NY) ever go see their
optometrist for eye related disease or injuries and instead go to their
GP.
- How many patients are being forced financially to join HMO's, which
private practice optometrists are not allowed to see.
- How a patient will go see an MD who is on an insurance plan, rather
than pay privately (out of pocket) to an OD who is not on the plan.
- How many of the things they learned in school are simply to stretch out
the time it takes to complete the program and squeeze out more tuition
dollars from already broke students.
- How optometrists will essentially be trapped unless they have
a spouse with earning potential. How difficult it will be to leave the
profession due high financial obligations, high student loan debt, and an
inability to do anything else with an OD degree.
- How greedy optometric colleges are opening even more schools in an
already oversaturated and hypercompetitive marketplace.
And this is just the beginning.We haven't even begun to discuss the day to day frustrations of the profession such as:
- How optometry has become a volume oriented profession. How OD's will have to see a rediculously high number of patients to scratch out any kind of living.
- How they will constantly have to drop their professional fees to compete with retail.
- How they will have to accept Medicaid and all the bottom feeding eye care plans that spring up on a daily basis.
- How they will like working with imobile and unresponsive geriatics as the population grows older and older.
- How they can not sell contacts effectively due to the low prices offered by Costco and Wallmart.
- How they will like telling people that they are a doctor who works at Wallmart and Costco and seeing the reaction.
- How their consults will magically transform into a referral and a lost patient (Especially in Ca and NY).
- How they will feel about themselves when patients constanly refuse to tell them about sytemic related issues, because, "I'm just here for eyeglasses. I see my doctor for that stuff."
A TV campaign will be starting in the future, combined with visits to local undergradute colleges to warn and potentially save some students from making a horrible mistake.
Any support would be appreciated...
- The six figure (on average) student loan debt they will incur.
- The very little ocular disease they will see on a daily basis.
- Optometrists are barred from medical plans in many states.
- Optometrists are not permitted hospital privleges in many states.
- How underqualified they are to treat ocular disease (unless residency
trained), due to not seeing it that much.
- How much their skills will erode after graduation, by not using them and
mainly doing refractions.
- How they are being used as a revenue source for corporate optical
chains and those working there are driving their fellow optometrists in
private practice out of business.
- How unrealistic it is to believe that a new grad will start a practice,
being barred from medical plans, having six figure student loan debt,
retail competition and oversaturation of the marketplace by an influx of
new grads.
- How many new grads will sadly have to work in a retail setting in order
to start making payments on that six figure loan debt.
- How very few patients, (especially in Ca and NY) ever go see their
optometrist for eye related disease or injuries and instead go to their
GP.
- How many patients are being forced financially to join HMO's, which
private practice optometrists are not allowed to see.
- How a patient will go see an MD who is on an insurance plan, rather
than pay privately (out of pocket) to an OD who is not on the plan.
- How many of the things they learned in school are simply to stretch out
the time it takes to complete the program and squeeze out more tuition
dollars from already broke students.
- How optometrists will essentially be trapped unless they have
a spouse with earning potential. How difficult it will be to leave the
profession due high financial obligations, high student loan debt, and an
inability to do anything else with an OD degree.
- How greedy optometric colleges are opening even more schools in an
already oversaturated and hypercompetitive marketplace.
And this is just the beginning.We haven't even begun to discuss the day to day frustrations of the profession such as:
- How optometry has become a volume oriented profession. How OD's will have to see a rediculously high number of patients to scratch out any kind of living.
- How they will constantly have to drop their professional fees to compete with retail.
- How they will have to accept Medicaid and all the bottom feeding eye care plans that spring up on a daily basis.
- How they will like working with imobile and unresponsive geriatics as the population grows older and older.
- How they can not sell contacts effectively due to the low prices offered by Costco and Wallmart.
- How they will like telling people that they are a doctor who works at Wallmart and Costco and seeing the reaction.
- How their consults will magically transform into a referral and a lost patient (Especially in Ca and NY).
- How they will feel about themselves when patients constanly refuse to tell them about sytemic related issues, because, "I'm just here for eyeglasses. I see my doctor for that stuff."
A TV campaign will be starting in the future, combined with visits to local undergradute colleges to warn and potentially save some students from making a horrible mistake.
Any support would be appreciated...