{"id":13474,"date":"2017-05-09T08:59:42","date_gmt":"2017-05-09T15:59:42","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/spijue.wpengine.com\/news\/legislation-puts-alaska-eyes-at-risk\/"},"modified":"2017-05-09T08:59:42","modified_gmt":"2017-05-09T15:59:42","slug":"legislation-puts-alaska-eyes-at-risk","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/opinion\/legislation-puts-alaska-eyes-at-risk\/","title":{"rendered":"Legislation puts Alaska eyes at risk"},"content":{"rendered":"
If the Alaska State Medical Association, Alaska State Medical Board, Alaska Society of Eye Physicians and Surgeons and the American Academy of Ophthalmology all oppose legislation impacting eye care, why would Alaska lawmakers support it?<\/span><\/p>\n House Bill 103 will allow optometrists, who have not gone to medical school, to perform delicate surgery on and around the eye. This legislation threatens Alaskans’ eye safety, thus defeating the core purpose of any legislation that involves medical care: patient safety.<\/p>\n Special interests are driving this dangerous legislation that is currently navigating its way to becoming law. I work with patients every day as an ophthalmologist, providing medical and surgical care, as I have for over 20 years. My training and career have provided me with a broad and deep pool of experience that heightens my grave concerns about this frightening bill. If HB 103 were signed into law, Alaskans would be subject to receiving care from optometrists outside the scope of their training. They lack the medical or surgical training to get a legislative green light to use needles, scalpels and even lasers on eyes. We need to put an end to this persistent attempt at creating bad public policy that places Alaskan\u2019s vision at risk.<\/p>\n All ophthalmologists train for four grueling years in medical school and a one-year internship to receive comprehensive knowledge about the entire human body. This is followed by three to five more years of full time surgical residency training specific to the eye. This leads to thousands and thousands of hours of hands on training compared to, at best, hundreds of hours of hands on training for optometrists, none of which includes surgical training!<\/p>\n Simply put, there are no shortcuts for learning how to safely perform these procedures. It is likely that the training that optometrists would receive to perform eye procedures would amount to a weekend course!<\/p>\n