PS: If I am putting too much detail in these "reports" please let me know. I'm trying to help those "fence-sitters" decide whether this is right for them, but I don't want to bore you too much.
I offered to have people ask me privately about my dealings with the clinic and my results. Oddly enough, I had a woman read my name in People Magazine (editor column) and "special contacts" and she called me. She called all the people in my town with the same last name until she located me. My phone is listed under my husband's name. I had written a remark to People about bad surgical results. She knew I was referring to the Boston Scleral Lens and was on her way there.
I have to say that I am very wary of writing profusely about my experience. While I have benefited from the lens, I don't think most people understand the use of the lens. The only thing left for me is to have my left eye closed surgically. Period. (Especially since the diagnosis and worsening via Sjogrens Syndrome.) I have visual problems in addition to dry eyes. I have best corrected vision with glasses of about 20/60. I also have anisometriopia resulting from cataract surgery on one eye. The lens also correct this somewhat. I have trigeminal neuralgia in my left eye caused from the lasik surgery and exacerbated by the later cataract surgery.
As Erik reported, we are talking about $10,000 worth of lens and travel etc. How can I honestly write and embellish about my experience when I may be leading those "sitting on the fence" to go one way or another? I can't. I have heard from people who have the lens and the lens is now sitting in their drawyer. My health insurance paid for my lens. I paid my expenses for two trips from Michigan to Boston out of pocket. Going in, I did not know if the insurance would cover my lens or not. They would not commit to me or BFS until after I had been issued the lens. Imagine the tension there. You have to get them (the lens), then we'll consider. Just write and tell us why you think we should cover it. Fortunately, the lens were covered, but I walked out of the clinic knowing I may be responsible for at least a portion.
I am afraid this is taking on a sort of circus atmosphere, with people reading with anticipation. I know I am reading Erik's report with anticipation. I also know that people are desperate. I also know many people's problems may be temporary. I know at times my eyes are so bad, I'd sell my kids, mortgage the family farm - all in the name of relief. I don't have kids (plural), a farm or a mortgage, so it's hypothetical.
I felt it necessary for me (a mere person with crispy, cruddy eyes) to be low profile and not embellish this experience. I'm honest and said I have been helped by the Boston Sclerals. I am also not an every day case of dry eyes.
I had to stop working last year because of my eye conditions and applied for and was awarded Social Security Disability.
Why am I getting such a "feeling of butterflies in my stomach" with Erik's report as well as Rebecca's?
I know how desperate we can be. I don't want to feel responsible for fence sitters thinking about the lens making a decision one way or another. I think the Boston Scleral Lens are for extreme cases and it seems to becoming something for the mainstream dry eye? I don't think so. When I decided to go for the lens, I made a private decision to do so after much research and realizing that my case was getting worse. I did not have a lot of glory stories to read. I had to cut to the facts and what I was willing to risk to try the lens. For someone now living on social security (husband retired also), this was a big leap of faith for me.
Erik and Rebecca are much younger than I. Erik is a practicing physician and these lens are just likely will make his job easier and his life easier. He is also in the US Army and I'm proud to know most any soldier. The successful use of the lens could mean new possibilities for people who have been unable to work. It could mean a whole new life for others who have been disabled by their eye conditions. I hope the lens bring all good things.
For me, it is a matter of opening my eyes or not. It has even become more so since I've gotten the lens last October. I have been ill much of the time and my eyes are my main sore point and gotten unbelievably worse with Sjogrens. I've never worn contact lens in my life and never wanted to. Thick glasses were with me from 7 years old to well--never mind. I thought I would treat myself to lasik as I was a mature, employed adult with vision almost -10. I could afford it, what the heck.
Back to the lens: Now, if we can get clinics out in the population and available at reasonable fees, then it's a whole different ballgame for the purpose of dry eye. I feel people who have diseased eyes and need the lens have probably already gotten them. They, or their doctors researched enough so they landed on the BFS website. That's what I did. Then I spoke to Dr. Rosenthal and my ophthalmologist and we set the wheels turning.
I'm writing here to dampen the fire a little for those reading about the lens. I always was a devil's advocate. Sorry, but I just don't feel good about all the hoopla being written about this. Even though I know Erik will be objective in his report and I can't wait to read it, I can just feel the atmosphere is running a bit high. Just who is qualified to help the fence sitters decide?
Who will the fence sitters look to if they are disappointed? Or spent money they shouldn't have? I just know that person is not me and question who wants that responsibility.
Comment