If you dislike wearing glasses and you are not a suitable candidate for laser eye surgery, then implantable contact lenses (ICL’s) may offer the permanent vision correction solution that you require.
Implantable contact lenses basically work in exactly the same way as standard, external contact lenses do. ICL’s alter the shape of the cornea in order to correct refractive errors such as near and far-sightedness, and astigmatism. However, unlike non-permanent contact lenses, ICL’s are surgically placed inside the eye rather than over the top of it.
Implantable contact lenses are also sometimes known as phakic intraocular lenses (IOL’s). The reason for this is because the two share a number of characteristics. IOL’s are seen in cataract surgery where they take the place of the affected natural lens after it has been removed. However, when used as implantable contact lenses they work in conjunction with the natural lens of the eye in order to correct your vision.
The procedure requires your surgeon to make a tiny incision into the cornea to allow access to the natural lens underneath. The ICL is then inserted through the incision and placed either in front of or behind the iris which is the colored part of your eye and in front of the natural lens. The incision into the cornea is able to heal naturally without stitches, and the entire process is extremely quick.
Your surgeon will give you anesthetic, usually in the form of eye drops, ahead of the procedure and therefore you should experience very little, if any, discomfort.
As our Front Desk Coordinator, you will have the incredible honor to set the stage for each patient’s appointment. When our patients walk in, you will be the first person they see to reassure them they have made the right decision in choosing our practice, it really changes their day! Not only that, but it sets the expectation for the appointment and lets our patients know their appointment will go as smoothly as possible, allowing the patient to be receptive to our recommendations.
Some of your duties will include:
Making sure patients feel welcome as soon as they walk in the door
Pleasantly answering questions and making appointments for existing and potential clients
Reviewing and organizing patient medical charts for accuracy and authenticity
Using your friendliest phone voice to answer incoming calls, take messages, complete outreach to patients (some re-engagement required)
Assisting in opening and closing the office
Understanding and respecting patient privacy laws
Consistent training for optimal career growth
You’ll be handing a lot of the important work that goes on to set the doctor and the patient up for success. As the first person to work with each patient during their appointment, you’ll be the one that calms their nerves, gets them in a great mood, and shows them that we are there to serve them in every way we can!
Some of your duties will include:
Taking the patient back to the exam room and verifying their medical history
Spending 15+ minutes with each patient before the doctor comes in, performing duties such as measuring retinal function, peripheral vision, and retinal thickness; and taking retinal photographs. (You’ll be using the same type of instruments NASA uses on the space station!)
“Refracting” the patient, which means starting the process of finding the patient’s eyeglass prescription before the doctor comes in to refine it.
Taking notes for the doctor during the patient’s exam.
Ordering proper tests based on the doctor’s diagnoses.
Consistent training for optimal career growth
Properly coding procedures so everything gets paid by the patient’s insurance.
You’ll be helping our patients choose the right glasses for them based on their lifestyle, prescription, personal style, and more. Out of everyone that works at our practice, the Optician has the honor of satisfying patients the most! People walk in not being able to see, and you’re the one that sends them out looking great and SEEING great - so you get all the glory!
This is not just any sales job! Your role is to be an educator and a style consultant. If you loath pushy salespeople, you’ll love this job, because we can’t stand pushy salespeople, either.
Some of your duties will include:
Helping people pick out frames that suit them based on the shape of their face, bridge fit, lifestyle, and prescription.
Determining the best lens types, materials, coatings, and brands for patients’ lifestyles. For example, a kid who plays basketball will need something different from someone who works on a computer all day.
Educating first-timers on how to use and take care of their glasses
Troubleshooting prescription issues
Taking accurate measurements for all lens styles and prescriptions
Checking new glasses for fit and making adjustments
Miscellaneous repairs
Billing insurance
Consistent training for optimal career growth
Educating patients on what their benefits cover
Keeping the optical space looking clean, neat and welcoming
Doing inventory, ordering, sending and receiving shipments
One fine body…