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Thread: Tips for Buying Prescription Glasses Online

  1. #16
    Ladies and gents I was wondering if the Ophthalmologists you go to just check your vision with an eye chart etc., or do they pressure test for Glaucoma, photograph/scan the eye to check the retina and optic nerve plus a new one for me this year was a laser which scans the cells below the retina surface for problems? My Optometrist does all of these exams in addition to what she can see with her loupe and blinding light. They are kept for comparisons when I come in for my exam every two years.

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Joiner View Post

    Now I'm on Medicare and my recent exam by
    an Ophthalmologist was paid by insurance. The office charged $50 for the copy of the RX according to the receptionist. I'm happy to pay that.
    They charged Medicare or you $50? I sure hope it is Medicare.
    Mine filled out the DMV paperwork for free.

  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Christensen View Post
    Ladies and gents I was wondering if the Ophthalmologists you go to just check your vision with an eye chart etc., or do they pressure test for Glaucoma, photograph/scan the eye to check the retina and optic nerve plus a new one for me this year was a laser which scans the cells below the retina surface for problems? My Optometrist does all of these exams in addition to what she can see with her loupe and blinding light. They are kept for comparisons when I come in for my exam every two years.
    Peter,
    In my area the optometrists do some of the tests you describe but they say "additional testing may be required to diagnose an eye disease".
    The ophthalmologist is the medical doctor the optometrist would send you to. An ophthalmologist is an MD that does surgery, an optometrist is an OD that has a doctorate degree.
    The last time I got an eye exam from an optometrist was 10 years ago. I had been having what I now know are ocular migraines. I wanted an expert to examine my eyes and get a new RX for glasses. The OD called his MD friend in the middle of my exam. The OD was reporting my "eye condition" to the MD by phone. I overheard "never seen anything like this" and "what is it" I was concerned but the OD said "The MD said your fine". I was happy to be fine and mostly wanted a new RX and glasses.

    I later learned from my own research that an ophthalmologist was an MD and I had ocular migraines. There's no treatment for ocular migraine, but why not just go to real DR to get my eye exams from now on?

    Still a mystery what the OD saw and was concerned about.
    "Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t - you’re right."
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  4. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Wade Lippman View Post
    They charged Medicare or you $50? I sure hope it is Medicare.
    Mine filled out the DMV paperwork for free.
    They charged me. What is the DMV paperwork? I don't think we have that in Oregon.
    "Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t - you’re right."
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  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Joiner View Post
    Hi Osvaldo,
    Have you tried online glasses?
    No, I don't... but I already had purchased prescribed glasses in glass shops in Shopping Malls, I think they are closely related to Internet shopping - and again, they did not compared against specialist Optical shops. The first one I found was at Dusseldorf, Germany, but I discovered a couple of them also here, in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Their prices are much higher than popular shops but the results are way better, IMHO.

    Edited to add: also from my experience, specialized Optical shops makes difference only at progressive glasses. For fixed focus glasses, my own experience is the brand of the lenses is more important and the different providers using the same manufacturer for lenses with generate very close quality glasses (I have also two fixed focal pair of glasses, one for book reading and another to use at my desktop computer workstation with a 32-in monitor).
    Last edited by Osvaldo Cristo; 02-23-2019 at 4:13 PM.
    All the best.

    Osvaldo.

  6. #21
    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Joiner View Post
    Peter,
    In my area the optometrists do some of the tests you describe but they say "additional testing may be required to diagnose an eye disease".
    The ophthalmologist is the medical doctor the optometrist would send you to. An ophthalmologist is an MD that does surgery, an optometrist is an OD that has a doctorate degree.
    The last time I got an eye exam from an optometrist was 10 years ago. I had been having what I now know are ocular migraines. I wanted an expert to examine my eyes and get a new RX for glasses. The OD called his MD friend in the middle of my exam. The OD was reporting my "eye condition" to the MD by phone. I overheard "never seen anything like this" and "what is it" I was concerned but the OD said "The MD said your fine". I was happy to be fine and mostly wanted a new RX and glasses.

    I later learned from my own research that an ophthalmologist was an MD and I had ocular migraines. There's no treatment for ocular migraine, but why not just go to real DR to get my eye exams from now on?

    Still a mystery what the OD saw and was concerned about.
    I see things are different here. Ophthalmologists here are by referral from an Optometrist only or run laser surgery places. They don't normally do eye exams for prescriptions. Maybe the difference between private and public medical systems.

  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Joiner View Post
    They charged me. What is the DMV paperwork? I don't think we have that in Oregon.
    If you were actually charged you need to go get a refund. That is illegal. You have or will pay for the eye exam. The copy of your prescription is something you are entitled to. In fact if you want to go somewhere else to get your glasses they have to sign it to certify it too. If you go to an MD for whatever do the charge to issue a prescription? Check this link out.

    consumer.ftc.gov/articles/0116-prescription-glasses-and-contact-lenses

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Yonak Hawkins View Post

    I've been very happy with Zenni Optical. I've bought 9 pair there. All are for specialty applications .. everything from reading to magnifying to close work to computer screen distance to table saw distance to band saw distance to infinity. My glasses are stationed where I use them. $6.95 a pair makes this possible, more for sunglasses, bifocals or special frames for magnification. Others may find this confusing or cumbersome but I like glasses that are exact for the distance rather than progressives.
    Yonak,
    Did Zenni sunglasses work for you? If so what tint?

    I got the darkest grey and clear RX eyeglasses in the same frames 15 months ago. I had both pairs tested on a lensometer locally. They were exactly to the RX but the grey was a bit blurry. I only wear them windsurfing so the're covered in spray and I got use to them. Zenni said send em back, but local experts say that can happen with all dark RX sunglasses.
    "Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t - you’re right."
    - Henry Ford

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter Christensen View Post
    Ladies and gents I was wondering if the Ophthalmologists you go to just check your vision with an eye chart etc., or do they pressure test for Glaucoma, photograph/scan the eye to check the retina and optic nerve plus a new one for me this year was a laser which scans the cells below the retina surface for problems? My Optometrist does all of these exams in addition to what she can see with her loupe and blinding light. They are kept for comparisons when I come in for my exam every two years.
    My opthalmologist does this. I never received previously that from an optometrist, just a glaucoma & eye test, nothing to check for any possible disease(s).
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  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Andrew Joiner View Post
    Yonak,
    Did Zenni sunglasses work for you? If so what tint? .
    Andrew, I got tinted bifocals. I keep them in the car and, to tell the truth, I always forget to wear them when it's sunny. I'm not a sunglasses-wearing type so it skips my mind. I just now went out and put them on so I could answer your question but, unfortunately, it's raining and kind of dark so, while my vision lessened with them on, I believe it's because of lack of light. Otherwise things seem sharp. The tinting is darker at the top and less so at the bottom where the close vision lens is. To find out the tint I went to the Zenni site but, unfortunatly, I guess they don't keep order history for that long ago. Foiled again ! I'm sorry I can't be much help.

  11. #26
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    Here is the story but it only applies to the US. Not sure about the rest of the world.
    An Ophthalmologist is an MD. They took Pre-Med and then went to Medical School. Then they picked a specialty. The very few that chose Ophthalmology received a little bit of training in Optics and associated areas regarding proscribing glasses. Then a VERY few of them were actually good at eye surgery. That tiny percentage hit the lottery and could charge stupid prices for doing eye surgery. It isn't so much they studied well and worked hard so much as the very few were talented at that skill. Lucky, genetically programmed for that skill, whatever. My father has the reputation for being the best Optometrist around here and he was working with one who was doing 8 $6500 surgeries every day - 20 years ago.
    The vast majority couldn't do it well so could do some surgery and some eye exams and prescribing glasses. BUT they had received only months of training for that, NOT years. MOST of them are just doing exams, mostly to the naive people that think they know what they are doing because they have an MD.
    An Optometrist spent a bit less total time, but still a LOT of years learning how to do exams and fit glasses. TONS of training in that narrow area compared to an Ophthalmologist.
    So most Ophthalmologists end up doing the job of an Optometrist and doing it fairly poorly. It isn't fair to them but that is how it works.
    The good Ophthalmologists are very rare and are referred surgery by Optometrists or have an Optometrist working with them full time.
    As my father used to say "an expert is a person that knows more and more about less and less". Just because a person is an MD doesn't mean they know squat. I think 20% of my friends are MDs and they constantly are asking me for my expertise on something. Sure, they know their field but if you get out of their field, then it goes downhill, FAST.
    Like everything it seems, DON'T buy into the marketing crap!
    I go to the lady that bought the practice from the guy that bought it from my dad a long time ago. She is expensive and worth every penny no matter how much it hurts to pay the bill.

  12. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Yonak Hawkins View Post
    Andrew, I got tinted bifocals. I keep them in the car and, to tell the truth, I always forget to wear them when it's sunny. I'm not a sunglasses-wearing type so it skips my mind. I just now went out and put them on so I could answer your question but, unfortunately, it's raining and kind of dark so, while my vision lessened with them on, I believe it's because of lack of light. Otherwise things seem sharp. The tinting is darker at the top and less so at the bottom where the close vision lens is. To find out the tint I went to the Zenni site but, unfortunatly, I guess they don't keep order history for that long ago. Foiled again ! I'm sorry I can't be much help.
    That helps, thanks. I may try the gradient tint on my next pair. Yesterday it was really sunny and bright from snow cover. Rare for my area. In those conditions my dark grey Zenni RX sunglasses were sharper than my identical clear lenses.
    "Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t - you’re right."
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  13. #28
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    I will take an ophthamalogist every time,
    for the same reason there are no bargains in parachutes.

  14. #29
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    Getting back to the original question of buying glasses glasses on line, how do you get them adjusted to fit comfortably? I recall when I wore glasses it sometimes took one or two trips back to the store to get new glasses properly adjusted and sometimes additional trips back months later if they got knocked out of adjustment. I had a very strong prescription and thus my glasses were heavier than average even with high refractive index material. I'm now glasses free since cataract surgery 5 or 6 years ago.

  15. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by Doug Garson View Post
    Getting back to the original question of buying glasses glasses on line, how do you get them adjusted to fit comfortably? I recall when I wore glasses it sometimes took one or two trips back to the store to get new glasses properly adjusted and sometimes additional trips back months later if they got knocked out of adjustment. I had a very strong prescription and thus my glasses were heavier than average even with high refractive index material. I'm now glasses free since cataract surgery 5 or 6 years ago.
    In my case the frames from Zenni have all fit me fine right out of the box. It was a surprise to me. I'm fussy about fit. In the 57 years I've been wearing glasses I learned how bend them to fit. I heat the plastic with hot water. Some opticians did a good job, but usually I'd fine tune them.
    "Whether you think you can, or you think you can’t - you’re right."
    - Henry Ford

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