Having a chat with my ophthalmologist and I showed him the link that Rebecca posted a while back http://www.dryeyeclinic.net/blog
He is head of clinic at a good NHS eye clinic (I'm in South East England), he also has a private practice. He is quite honest with me and said that he is often told he spends too much time on patients with dry eye. He treats children with complex corneal dystrophies so I assume other ophths think this is where his time should be spent. Obviously his time is well spent treating those cases (and i know a few people on this forum have children who have been helped greatly by him) but he understands how debilitating dry eye can be and said he would help me with a campaign to increase awareness amongst doctors (GPs included). I've been thinking about this for a while anyway because my GP is clueless and always asks if I've tried all the different artificial tears, doesn't know what punctal plugs are and thinks I should stop worrying about it etc.
Anyway, my question is, is this futile? I think a lot of us have seen ophths who send us away as quickly as possible with the old hot compresses and more eye drops advice and for many of us it doesn't work. I for one have cried in front of an (expensive) Moorfields ophth and was told "it's very common, it's just something you learn to live with so don't get down about it. It will likely get worse as you get older anyway. Don't waste any more time and money on it". This attitude really has to change, I'm mentally stronger now but it's hard to pick yourself up after those sort of appointments.
My ophthalmologist doesn't have a whole lot of free time but if he could provide support in any way I'd like to utilise it. Any ideas? I don't know where to begin....
He is head of clinic at a good NHS eye clinic (I'm in South East England), he also has a private practice. He is quite honest with me and said that he is often told he spends too much time on patients with dry eye. He treats children with complex corneal dystrophies so I assume other ophths think this is where his time should be spent. Obviously his time is well spent treating those cases (and i know a few people on this forum have children who have been helped greatly by him) but he understands how debilitating dry eye can be and said he would help me with a campaign to increase awareness amongst doctors (GPs included). I've been thinking about this for a while anyway because my GP is clueless and always asks if I've tried all the different artificial tears, doesn't know what punctal plugs are and thinks I should stop worrying about it etc.
Anyway, my question is, is this futile? I think a lot of us have seen ophths who send us away as quickly as possible with the old hot compresses and more eye drops advice and for many of us it doesn't work. I for one have cried in front of an (expensive) Moorfields ophth and was told "it's very common, it's just something you learn to live with so don't get down about it. It will likely get worse as you get older anyway. Don't waste any more time and money on it". This attitude really has to change, I'm mentally stronger now but it's hard to pick yourself up after those sort of appointments.
My ophthalmologist doesn't have a whole lot of free time but if he could provide support in any way I'd like to utilise it. Any ideas? I don't know where to begin....
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