Hey, I'm against stealing patients from anyone, but your description seems flawed. You gripe about the "pittance" you get for co-management, then say that ophthalmologists are stealing your patients for the money? What money? The exam fees? That would be ridiculous. Unless you're in a saturated area where patients are simply hard to come by, most ophthalmologists are going to be looking for patients on whom they can do procedures/surgery. That's where they make their money. Not on exams. Or do the practices in question have optical? If that's the case, maybe you shouldn't refer to them, like KHE says. Fact is, there are crummy, sleazy docs in both our camps. If you go back and read my posts, I was referring specifically to cases of co-management abuse, which I stated are a minority but are more common in metropolitan areas, such as mine. In those cases, it is all about the money . . . on both sides.
I'm sure its regional but its all I know, from what I have come to understand, "exams" pay the bills and "procedures" are the gravy. Saying exams aren't valuable is a non-starter. That argument will never fly.
For the record the only "comanagement" fee I get is from the rare Lasik case. Since I'm not a big fan of corrective eye sx, this is barely worth discussing. You should realize that when you say "comanage", to me that means I saw the 80yo wet amd who finished going through months of avastin from the retina guy I sent them to. I don't get any "fee" or "kickback" from the retina fellow, just an office visit fee from the pt or their insurance.
Point is there is no sense in pointing fingers at optometry when ophthalmology is rife with the SAME problems.
or has anything that is not myopia or hyperopia