You're probably wondering why this guy is smiling.
It's because after wearing vision-correcting eyeglasses since the fifth grade he's driving his Mustang while wearing a pair of uncorrected sunglasses that set him back a $1.50.
Since I retired my annual visit to the eye doc has included monitoring the progression of cataracts that have conspired to degrade my vision. Cataracts are a clouding of the natural lens of the eye, leading to blurred vision, glare, and eventual vision loss. This spring's routine visit resulted in sufficient advancement of the condition to do something about it.
I finally got my chance to get my eyes fixed. Two visits, one week apart, to the Eye Clinic in Green Bay.
Cataract surgery removes the cloudy lens and replaces it with a clear artificial intraocular lens (IOL). And for me it opened up a world where everything is clearer, brighter and more colorful. I didn't know what I was missing.
This is an outpatient procedure performed under local anesthesia with sedation (you’re awake but relaxed). Most commonly it is performed with phacoemulsification (ultrasound to break up the lens), followed by IOL insertion. Truthfully, the prep and recovery took up most of the time. The procedure itself took all of ten minutes and required no eye drops in the follow-up care.
By all outward appearances things were busy at the clinic. Inquiring of the surgical staff I learned that there were four operating rooms and two surgeons performing, respectively, approximately 20 procedures each day of my visits.
Cataract surgery is the most commonly-performed procedure on the planet with over 3.7 million surgeries performed annually in the United States. Over 20 million are performed globally each year and the number continues to rise due to aging populations.
Over 98% of surgeries result in improved vision and complications are rare and usually treatable. 95% of patients achieve 20/40 vision or better (good enough to drive without corrective lenses) and many achieve 20/20 with or without glasses depending on lens choice.
Best of all the procedure is covered by Medicare and my supplemental insurance policy. Between you and me this is good government policy; trust me, you don't want millions of vision-impaired baby boomers on the road.
At the present time both my eyes have been corrected to 20/20 vision so I went to the Dollar Store and splurged less than ten bucks for four pair of +1.75 reading glasses and a couple of plain sunglasses - one for each automobile. My doc sez that I need to allow a month (give or take) before a final correction in vision can be confirmed.
We are blessed to live in a Golden Age of replacement parts.
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