As the chief of cornea and contact lens service at Nova Southeastern University College of Optometry, I specialize in contact lens fittings and know the good, the bad, and the ugly of contact lens use.
The “good” which comes from contact lens use is that millions of people achieve excellent vision and improved lifestyle with proper medical fitting and use of FDA-approved contact lenses. That said, contact lenses are a federally regulated medical device that, when abused, can turn the “good” into the “bad and ugly” by causing severe damage to the eye, including vision loss.
During the past decade, I have observed patient noncompliance steadily increase mainly because of the availability of on-line contact lenses and the role “online” sellers have played in undermining the doctor-patient relationship. In fact, research shows that patients purchasing contact lenses online are less compliant with FDA guidelines and consequently exhibit more eye disease and damage. That’s because the patient’s focus is being shifted by online seller activity from sound contact lens fitting, care, and timely follow-up to “cheapest deal and cheapest price.”
Legislation that has been filed in Florida Legislature this year, would make it easier for patients to be targeted and ultimately harmed by discount contact lens websites and retailers. Put frankly, 1-800 contacts “free market” legislation would drive an even larger wedge between the eye care provider and the patient.
On-line contact lens vendors have facilitated patients receiving contact lenses well beyond the prescription’s expiration dates. Some patients, who should have returned for an eye examination in one to two years to obtain an updated contact lens prescription, were able to refill their old contact lens prescriptions on-line well beyond documented expiration dates.
Recently, I evaluated two such patients, one after four years and the other after six years of repeated on-line purchase of contact lenses using an original (old) prescription. Of the two patients, one had significant corneal damage because the contact lens fit was slowly “suffocating” the eye to the point that abnormal blood vessels had grown. I immediately refit this patient into a contact lens that provided a higher degree of “breathability” to the eye when compared with the brand of lens he was still wearing. Nevertheless, the damage was done. The damage, however, could have been avoided had the online retailer not sold lenses for an expired prescription.
As a doctor, I am terrified by the idea of the Florida Legislature further allowing a “big corporation” to make eye-care decisions, such as illegally extending a contact lens prescription or making “substitutions” for contact lens prescriptions based on price alone. I fear that the proposed “free market” legislation brought forth by 1-800 CONTACTS is motivated solely by their narrow economic interests and will only further erode the essential patient-doctor relationship, harming the eye health of my patients. Please defeat Senate Bill 1400 and House Bill 1119.
Andrea Janoff, O.D., is a member of the Foundation of the American Academy of Ophthalmology.