nanosomic said:This is not meant to start the usual debate, but if you opto doctors, students, wannabe opto doctors could include one more procedure currently outside of your scope of practice (for the most part), what will it be and why?
Tom_Stickel said:Nanosomic,
First, the big question for you is why you're asking this question if not to start the usual debate.
Second, it seems that you somewhat realize that there are 50 different scopes of practice (51, counting D.C.) and they vary dramatically. Ask this question to an OD or student from Massachusetts and you'll get a drastically different answer than if you ask someone from Oklahoma. So it's not a particularly good question to ask.
Which brings about the real issue for optometry: should we be trying to expand privileges in places like OK and New Mexico until we have more standardized scopes of practice everywhere else? IMO, until we get more uniform practice laws and reciprocal licensure, lasers and scalpels should be a distant concern.
Tom Stickel
Indiana U. 2001
nanosomic said:I believe laser should be within your scope of practice (this is coming from someone who will be in medical school and thinking optho). As somebody pointed out, there are not enough optho docs to do all the laser procedures people need or will be needing.
cpw said:... and I'd also like to see more reciprocity between states. Some states are rediculous to try to get licensed in.
Kristene9 said:I haven't really thought about different states and getting a license. I thought that all the schools prepare you to work in any state. I realized that if you were to work in Oklahoma you would probably have to go though some extra classes. What are some of the harder states to get your license in?
brendang said:I find it truly amazing how there is such discrepency among states as to what optoms are permitted to do... No wonder the field is constantly criticized as unorganized and confused... Says a lot about a profession that is limited not by science & technology but by legislation/lobbying... Yesterday's ruling concerning the state of NM was yet another notch in our cap... As far as one more procedure optoms should be interested in, here's something novel -- how about prescribing and making glasses!!! It seems as though you have all lost your way from your true station in the face of laser and intraorbital surgery...
JennyW said:It's not a coincidence that the states that have the most restrictive scope of optometric practice also have the largest number of ophthalmologists. Don't think for one second that optometry is the only profession that "lobbies." For many years, OMDs lobbied their legislatures claiming that if ODs were allowed to use topical diagnostic agents, that we would be blinding our patients with proparacaine and killing them with tropicamide.
I could tell you many stories of ridiculous OMD lobbying in my home state of New York.
Jenny
JR said:I think I'll take you up on this, Jenny. I can't wait to hear about "ridiculous lobbying". All I hear and see on this forum is the lobbying efforts of non-surgeons non-physicians to start doing intraocular surgery.
brendang said:I'd like to believe that my additions to this forum are not inflammatory... The truth is that no one seems to understand that there is a monumental difference between the qualifications and capacities of ophthalmologists and what it is you do... Until optometrists start referring to themselves as such and not by the ambigious title of "eye doctor" both in speech and in referral (business cards, discussions, billboards signs) I wish to simply state the truth and remind those who have faltered... The intention of my previous posting was simply to state that if the field of optometry was coherent and purposeful, you wouldn't have to step on everyone else's toes for validation... It is unfortunate that those of MD background find truth in my opinions and those of your perspective find inflammation. Chaque un à son gout, mon frere...
JR said:I think I'll take you up on this, Jenny. I can't wait to hear about "ridiculous lobbying". All I hear and see on this forum is the lobbying efforts of non-surgeons non-physicians to start doing intraocular surgery.
You belong in Cenozoic period predating our dinosaur friends with comments like that.......Either have something productive to say or leave.........brendang said:I find it truly amazing how there is such discrepency among states as to what optoms are permitted to do... No wonder the field is constantly criticized as unorganized and confused... Says a lot about a profession that is limited not by science & technology but by legislation/lobbying... Yesterday's ruling concerning the state of NM was yet another notch in our cap... As far as one more procedure optoms should be interested in, here's something novel -- how about prescribing and making glasses!!! It seems as though you have all lost your way from your true station in the face of laser and intraorbital surgery...
Look, I respect Allopathic and Osteopathic training but it is unecessary when you are a practitioner of limited scope (ie optometrist, podiatrist, dentist.)ReMD said:If what you say is true, then what's the point for an OMD to go through medical school? Do you think that med school and internship are useless in the training of an ophthalmologist?
futuredoctorOD said:Enough is enough.... I know my posts amuse you but what amuses me even more is the garbage that comes out of the mouths of many OMD's on here. The fact is I have spent about a month researching the legal histories of optometry and opthalmology and there is a long history of a purpose to keep optometry from being anything but a glass prescribing profession! It took 25 years of state by state court battles to achieve prescription rights for topical pharmaceutical agents in 50 states and oral pharms in 37 states. What Jenny says about Opthalmology in the 70's publically saying that patients would go blind if optometrists prescribed topical drugs is completely true. Your profession has done nothing but try to injure and prevent optometry from evolving. Your profession has the undeniable arrogance in believing that "your model" (allopathy--med school, residency) is the only path to enlightenment especially regarding opthalmic medicine. "non-surgeons non-physicians to start doing intraocular surgery"---what a bunch of crap. I say add surgical education and training just like podiatry and dental programs have, hire some pro-optometry opthalmologists to teach it--(so the argument about Optometry not having traditional education in surgery becomes moot) and replicate the efforts not unlike the 25 year battle for pharmaceutical privilages....but do it step by step..procedure by procedure because opthalmology (the Oil Trust of Opthalmic Medicine) will never allow it. Somehow (with the legal system---or something) create some residence based surgery training for OD's. Refractive Management is in the realm of Optometric Medicine and should include refractive surgery. Yes I said it and I can hear the backlash of responses this silly site will have.....I guess Podiatrists and Dentists are non-physicians doing surgery and optometrists will be too...lol But the difference is---I think optometrists, dentists, and podiatrists are physicians....After what I have researched and read about in my limited leisure time....I absolutely support limited optometric surgery---Especially Lasik because it is the natural extension of Refractive Management (especially especially in the future when Lasik becomes so routine that glasses and contacts are much less necessary.) I don't care what Opthalmology or the AMA Health Care Trusts think about it---I really dont. So JR, you can insult Jenny and make fun of my comments but one thing I will close this post with is that some form of optometric surgical procedures is enevitable----in 20 years there will be a new argument. And for every childish backlash type response I am going to get in the next 24 hours------I NOW SUPPORT SURGICAL SCOPE EXPANSION FOR OPTOMETRY. 👍 😀 and equally support COOPERATION BETWEEN OPTHALMOLOGY AND OPTOMETRY---in the real world they are working together!
"You can't stop a tidal wave with an umbrella."
nanosomic said:I asked the question because I found out that (apart from laser use and surgery) opto docs in some states are allowed to do procedures (prescribing) that others in other states are not allowed to for example prescribing oral antibiotics. Also, I wanted to get the gut desire of you all. I believe laser should be within your scope of practice (this is coming from someone who will be in medical school and thinking optho). As somebody pointed out, there are not enough optho docs to do all the laser procedures people need or will be needing. In other countries (from what I have read and first hand experience), opto docs do more than here and the optho docs are not as hostile as they are here.
jefguth said:This thread is getting out of hand.
Brendang, you can question the qualification of optometrists all you want, and deride their education, but I fail to see how medical school at SABA would be any more strenous than the OD program at a place like the University of Waterloo, or University of California Berkeley. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
I understand that you are from Ontario, and as such are familiar with the limited scope of practice here. Optometrist in Ontario have the skills, training, and ethic to successfully manage the health of many patients that do have some unfortunate states of disease and infection but are simply limited by the legislation and the politics. Within time they will be handling more of this management without unnecessarily involving the time and limited resources of opthamology and will properly refer to you when necessary.
I stongly suggest a dose of humility, you nor opthamology have a monopoly on the capacity to achieve and to deliver excellent health care.
jefguth said:This thread is getting out of hand.
Brendang, you can question the qualification of optometrists all you want, and deride their education, but I fail to see how medical school at SABA would be any more strenous than the OD program at a place like the University of Waterloo, or University of California Berkeley. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
I understand that you are from Ontario, and as such are familiar with the limited scope of practice here. Optometrist in Ontario have the skills, training, and ethic to successfully manage the health of many patients that do have some unfortunate states of disease and infection but are simply limited by the legislation and the politics. Within time they will be handling more of this management without unnecessarily involving the time and limited resources of opthamology and will properly refer to you when necessary.
I stongly suggest a dose of humility, you nor opthamology have a monopoly on the capacity to achieve and to deliver excellent health care.
meb302 said:What happened to the motion suggesting that we ignore the fool? He does NOT have a clue, so just don't even acknowledge him.
brendang said:"there is a long history of a purpose to keep optometry from being anything but a glass prescribing profession!"
This is because you (Optometrists) are not the same as us (Ophthalmologists with Medical Training) and will never be!!! As Jenny mentioned previously, OD's have successfully managed glaucoma in the past, but what she fails to mention are how many patients are sub-optimally treated or even neglectfully treated... Just because OD's can remove foreign bodies does not imply that you should do it, or that you can expand your "surgical" scope... As Tyler Durden mentioned in Fight Club, "shoving feathers up your a$$ does not make you a chicken..." Unfortunately, OD's are having a difficult time understanding our inherent differences. Fortunately, patients and legislation will... Oklahoma and New Mexico have spoken... When (if!) OD's stick to what their inherent responsibilities are, then perhaps we may have a civil and sympathetic relationship. But your insistence in crossing the boundary into the land of the proverbial big boys is neglectful and unethical... The hippocratic oath stating that one should do no harm should be amended to your profession... Pleadging such would put you in your place... You do not pay malpractice insurance as an MD would and have not experienced the stresses of a medical internship. And yes, medical school was strenous (unlike OD school, I've come to understand from a friend of mine who attended a school in Chicago) but we did it regardless... Does OBGYN have anything to do with ophthalmology? No, but again, we did it... The fact is that we are physicians and surgeons and you are not. It is now time to accept it and stop making excuses why you deserve to upgrade your profession.
By the way---when I am done with school do you want to go laser shopping with me so I can have the best one in my office? lolbrendang said:"there is a long history of a purpose to keep optometry from being anything but a glass prescribing profession!"
This is because you (Optometrists) are not the same as us (Ophthalmologists with Medical Training) and will never be!!! As Jenny mentioned previously, OD's have successfully managed glaucoma in the past, but what she fails to mention are how many patients are sub-optimally treated or even neglectfully treated... Just because OD's can remove foreign bodies does not imply that you should do it, or that you can expand your "surgical" scope... As Tyler Durden mentioned in Fight Club, "shoving feathers up your a$$ does not make you a chicken..." Unfortunately, OD's are having a difficult time understanding our inherent differences. Fortunately, patients and legislation will... Oklahoma and New Mexico have spoken... When (if!) OD's stick to what their inherent responsibilities are, then perhaps we may have a civil and sympathetic relationship. But your insistence in crossing the boundary into the land of the proverbial big boys is neglectful and unethical... The hippocratic oath stating that one should do no harm should be amended to your profession... Pleadging such would put you in your place... You do not pay malpractice insurance as an MD would and have not experienced the stresses of a medical internship. And yes, medical school was strenous (unlike OD school, I've come to understand from a friend of mine who attended a school in Chicago) but we did it regardless... Does OBGYN have anything to do with ophthalmology? No, but again, we did it... The fact is that we are physicians and surgeons and you are not. It is now time to accept it and stop making excuses why you deserve to upgrade your profession.
nanosomic said:some optometrists are using laser for diagnostic purposes such as mapping the optical nerve head so saying optometrists are not trained to use lasers is dishonest.
futuredoctorOD said:It took 25 years of state by state court battles to achieve prescription rights for topical pharmaceutical agents in 50 states and oral pharms in 37 states. What Jenny says about Opthalmology in the 70's publically saying that patients would go blind if optometrists prescribed topical drugs is completely true. Your profession has done nothing but try to injure and prevent optometry from evolving. Your profession has the undeniable arrogance in believing that "your model" (allopathy--med school, residency) is the only path to enlightenment especially regarding opthalmic medicine. "non-surgeons non-physicians to start doing intraocular surgery"---what a bunch of crap. I say add surgical education and training just like podiatry and dental programs have, hire some pro-optometry opthalmologists to teach it--(so the argument about Optometry not having traditional education in surgery becomes moot) and replicate the efforts not unlike the 25 year battle for pharmaceutical privilages....but do it step by step..procedure by procedure because opthalmology (the Oil Trust of Opthalmic Medicine) will never allow it. Somehow (with the legal system---or something) create some residence based surgery training for OD's. Refractive Management is in the realm of Optometric Medicine and should include refractive surgery. Yes I said it and I can hear the backlash of responses this silly site will have.....I guess Podiatrists and Dentists are non-physicians doing surgery and optometrists will be too...lol But the difference is---I think optometrists, dentists, and podiatrists are physicians....After what I have researched and read about in my limited leisure time....I absolutely support limited optometric surgery---Especially Lasik because it is the natural extension of Refractive Management (especially especially in the future when Lasik becomes so routine that glasses and contacts are much less necessary.) ."
JennyW said:I understand your point, but I do not agree. There is not much point in training ODs to do laser procedures like YAGs and PIs because there just is not the demand out there, even in rural areas. I practice in a rural area and most ODs work in private practice like I do. The number of patients that I send out for ALT per year is less than I can count on one hand. It doesn't make sense to have an expensive laser sitting in my office that is going to gather dust. Same with YAGs. Same with PIs. (at least if you're going to be ethical about who gets a PI)
I did about 20 YAGs and 30 PIs when I worked for the IHS. I had one complication. One PI patient developed a uveitis that took much longer to heal. I just kept them on their Pred longer, which is exactly what any OMD would have done.
The point is that while these surgeries are not technically demanding and ODs could easily be trained to do them, there is not much point. From a political standpoint, it's not worth it.
The only expansion that I would support are the removal of chalazions and verucae and the performance of fluorescein angiograms.
Jenny
brendang said:how is it possible that you consider angio a minor procedure? what would you do if the patient bottomed out and crashed during the procedure? they teach you to run codes in OD school?
JennyW said:I was expecting a response like this.
The retinal specialist that I refer to said he has had exactly two patients "bottom out" in his 18 year, >10000 angiogram career and both times performed CPR, and called 911.
So no, I have never run a code, but I have yet to meet an OMD that would tube and bag a patient even if they had the equipment available which most of them do not, so lets be serious now.
Yes, I consider it a minor procedure. I have done about 40 of them myself and the only complication I ever had was one person puking on my new pair of shoes!
brendang said:Just as a follow-up because the thought of you simply ditching a dying patient is quite alarming to me; a surgeon is measured by his or her ability to maintain composure and apply the proper care when things take a turn for the worse... Part of this means having the necessary training to do whatever it takes to stabilize the patient's cardiopulmonary compromises.
brendang said:Just as a follow-up because the thought of you simply ditching a dying patient is quite alarming to me; a surgeon is measured by his or her ability to maintain composure and apply the proper care when things take a turn for the worse... Part of this means having the necessary training to do whatever it takes to stabilize the patient's cardiopulmonary compromises. Anyone can get lucky for, say, 40 procedures... But I can guarantee that something terrible will eventually happen to all of us who perform surgery and it's our training in all things related to medicine that will allow us to do everything in our power to save the life and not just the vision... I'd love to see what your reaction would be if some optom was performing an angio procedure on your mother/father/whomever, watched them code and simply threw in the towel while they were circling the drain... "Ooops, well, guess I'm good for the next 9 years!"... This is something that separates us from you and all the lobbying in the world will not change that.
On a separate note, I'm sorry to hear about your shoes... That must have been a horrible experience.
JennyW said:*yawn*
Who said anything about ditching a patient and watching them circle a drain. I can administer an epi pen. I can do CPR. I can call 911. These things are exactly what an OMD would do. I have worked in a number of OMD offices. None of them had a crash cart. None of them would tube a patient. NONE OF THEM.
I guess we should immediately stop all those dentists from injecting epinephrine and xylocaine into their patients. I'm sure dentists don't run a whole lot of codes in their training.
brendang said:Just as a follow-up because the thought of you simply ditching a dying patient is quite alarming to me; a surgeon is measured by his or her ability to maintain composure and apply the proper care when things take a turn for the worse... Part of this means having the necessary training to do whatever it takes to stabilize the patient's cardiopulmonary compromises. Anyone can get lucky for, say, 40 procedures... But I can guarantee that something terrible will eventually happen to all of us who perform surgery and it's our training in all things related to medicine that will allow us to do everything in our power to save the life and not just the vision... I'd love to see what your reaction would be if some optom was performing an angio procedure on your mother/father/whomever, watched them code and simply threw in the towel while they were circling the drain... "Ooops, well, guess I'm good for the next 9 years!"... This is something that separates us from you and all the lobbying in the world will not change that.
On a separate note, I'm sorry to hear about your shoes... That must have been a horrible experience.
JennyW said:*yawn*
Who said anything about ditching a patient and watching them circle a drain. I can administer an epi pen. I can do CPR. I can call 911. These things are exactly what an OMD would do. I have worked in a number of OMD offices. None of them had a crash cart. None of them would tube a patient. NONE OF THEM.
I guess we should immediately stop all those dentists from injecting epinephrine and xylocaine into their patients. I'm sure dentists don't run a whole lot of codes in their training.
futuredoctorOD said:The Opthalmologist that I shadow would call 911 in a similar circumstance......You have no respect for OD's, thier training, thier credential, and it is obvious you have something to prove....WHY?
file014 said:Well let me ask you this. What do you do when (hypothetically) one of your parents codes and BLS shows up at the door with their GED's and their EMT-B patches on their sleeves from a 6 month EMT course? They use procedures that they have been trained in and drop a dual-lumen airway (or whatever is allowed in your state) and use the AED. Or are they supposed to assess the situation and then call ALS with their 20 credit hours and 100 hours of ambulance training, while your parent is there with no O2 going to the brain? Can the EMT's handle the pressure also? Or do we need MD's on all ambulance routes now? What IS the solution then?
Might I upgrade my previous post...yesterday we had a pediatric ophthalmologist (one of about 8 in the whole state he said) lecture to my class. He decided it was worth his time to drive for and hour each way and spend 2 hours lecturing to us about strab surgery. In fact, its so important to him that he does it every year. Oh wait, it must be because he has 4 optometrists in the family. Oh, and the glaucoma specialist, the MS doc, the epidemiologist, and the numerous GP's thought they would share their knowledge with us too. Not to mention the pathologist who taught half of our pathology class and also teaches the MD students across campus. Have you realized you are in the minority yet? Yet you insist on making blanket statements about all OMD's and MD's. Our professions get along much better than you think and want to believe.
brendang said:I'm still learning the subtle differences between the US and Canada, but here, crash carts ARE mandatory in every room that angio is performed... What do they teach you in OD school about treatment of ventricular arrythmias refractory to an epi pen? And don't even start to compare yourselves to Dentists... They are 10 times the physician and surgeon OD's will ever be... They also spend the better part of their first 2 years in the same classes as medical students...
brendang said:I'm still learning the subtle differences between the US and Canada, but here, crash carts ARE mandatory in every room that angio is performed... What do they teach you in OD school about treatment of ventricular arrythmias refractory to an epi pen? And don't even start to compare yourselves to Dentists... They are 10 times the physician and surgeon OD's will ever be... They also spend the better part of their first 2 years in the same classes as medical students...
brendang said:They also spend the better part of their first 2 years in the same classes as medical students...
JennyW said:*yawn* again.
In that case, you might want to learn about the subtle differences between OD education (especially if your daddy is an OMD in Ontario and that's the only perspective you're getting) as well because I sat in the exact same anatomy classes as the med students, and the same biochemistry class, and had the same pathology instructor.
And I was referring to the use of an epi-pen for the treatment of anaphylaxis, not ventricular arrythmias. You probably knew that, but for some reason, felt the need to puff yourself up again.
I'm starting to wonder if having to go to SABA and then one of the lowest rated OMD programs in the country is what has made you so insecure. That's the only logical reason for your continued hostility.
I was thinking you were just an arrogant jerk, but now I'm just starting to feel sorry for you.
Jenny
Loncifer said:Whenever I read posts like this from arrogant, self-aggrandizing jerks from Canada, it makes me a little ashamed. Brendan obviously feels insecure (and probably got a hard time over) his Carribean med school background and feels better about himself for putting others down. For a nice reminder that med school doesn't automatically make you an Ubermensch please see this post by BelugaMD at the bottom of the page:
http://forums.studentdoctor.net/showthread.php?t=119156&page=3&pp=20
This is in no way meant to diminish the achievements of med school grads, but rather to remind OD students to study hard, achieve much and to have confidence necessary to practice to the fullest scope that law and their training allows. Don't ever let anyone, no matter what qualifying descriptors they put after their name, undermine your training or knowledge base.
P.S. brendang, as you're so fond of correcting other people's spelling (ophthalmology), you spelled arrhythmia incorrectly.
cpw said:so do ODs if you go to certain OD schools. NOVA puts the ODs, dentists and meds in one class. So does UAB. UH doesn't have a med program or we probably would too.
And, today in clinic... I was teaching Baylor med third years how to use a slit lamp and direct ophthalmoscope. many of them said "this is the first time I actually saw more than the red reflex". It was a good day. They were all very grateful. 😀
brendang said:Again, no need to make this personal (it seems like that's what y'all do on this forum when there is nothing of value to say), but I'm quite secure with what I've accomplished... Getting into an ophtho residency as a canadian and graduate of a caribbean school is much tougher than getting into optom school. I'm actually damn proud of myself... And as far as LSU being one of the lowest-rated OMD programs, I'd have to disagree... Their extra year is a blessing in disguise... The extra year is standard in Canadian residency training and provides one with a superior technical skill upon completion of residency training. This had a lot to do with one's ability to gain acceptance into and perform well in competitive fellowship appointments... And above all this, I never had to settle to become an optometrist.
brendang said:Again, no need to make this personal (it seems like that's what y'all do on this forum when there is nothing of value to say), but I'm quite secure with what I've accomplished... Getting into an ophtho residency as a canadian and graduate of a caribbean school is much tougher than getting into optom school. I'm actually damn proud of myself... And as far as LSU being one of the lowest-rated OMD programs, I'd have to disagree... Their extra year is a blessing in disguise... The extra year is standard in Canadian residency training and provides one with a superior technical skill upon completion of residency training. This had a lot to do with one's ability to gain acceptance into and perform well in competitive fellowship appointments... And above all this, I never had to settle to become an optometrist.