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Friday, 12 November 2010
Facebook Isn't Making Visitors Blind
Topic: Eye Care
Two days ago, Facebook shrank the font size of news feeds on people's home pages. Then the complaints flew, some claiming the onset of blindness. CNET reported that "If your eyes are hurting from the text on Facebook's home page, they were probably already subject to eye strain--the term for the discomfort, dryness, redness, and other unpleasant symptoms that can result from focusing on a computer screen or other object for too long--long before you loaded up the social network to check up on your FrontierVille homestead or to remove some unflattering photo tags. Eye care professionals say the smaller font size is unlikely to affect users' vision or eye health any more than its larger-type brethren. Eye strain, too, is temporary and very preventable." By the way CNET is not affliiated with Facebook.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:49 PM EST
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Volunteers Provide Care for 12,000
Topic: Eye Care
An international team of volunteer eye care professionals has reached more than 12,000 underprivileged people in the latest OneSight Foundation mission to a poor township, just outside of the South African city of Pretoria, goes the post on MiVision.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:33 AM EST
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Optical Sec Gets Two in the Slammer
Topic: Optical--Sort Of
OpticianOnline reports that "an optician's secretary who stole more than £170,000 over five and a half years was sentenced to two years imprisonment in Nottingham Crown Court."

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:22 AM EST
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Eye Clinic Gets Millions from a Reader
Topic: Eye Care
"Clemence “Keme” Williams, never one to mince words, has strong feelings about the Storm Eye Institute at the Medical University of South Carolina," goes the post on GreenvilleOnline. "'The Storm Eye Clinic saved my life,' says Williams, who was in such excruciating pain in 1998 that she says she 'would have committed suicide' had the Storm Eye Institute not solved a serious problem in both eyes.Williams, 85, has shown her appreciation by planning a gift of more than $1 million to the institute. Already a member of the Millennium Society of MUSC, Williams has established a fund that will donate the proceeds of her and her deceased sister’s estate, valued at more than $1 million, to the Storm Institute."

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:14 AM EST
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Thursday, 11 November 2010
10K New Customers in a Day
Topic: Eyewear
That's the claim of Canada's Coastal Contacts. "Coastal Contacts Inc., the leading online retailer of contact lenses and prescription eyeglasses, today provided an eyeglasses update that during a single twelve hour period in October, 2010 Coastal generated orders for more than ten thousand pairs of eyeglasses from new customers," says a report from YahooFinance.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:07 AM EST
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Girls Who Wear Glasses May Not Get Passes but They Get Rewards
Topic: Eyewear

"They say men don't make passes at girls who wear glasses - but Myleene Klass, Lisa Snowdon and Kelly Brook were determined to prove that old adage wrong at the Specsavers Spectacle Wearer Of The Year Awards last night,"according to a story from the DailyMail. "The trio of ocularly-challenged lovelies were a sight for sore eyes at the bash as they posed in their bins on the red carpet. Myleene, 32, was voted Celebrity Spectacle Wearer of the Year and received her crown from Kelly, 30, who's the face of Specsavers, though she only wears glasses for fashion."


Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:03 AM EST
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"Get Sighted" Goes National
Topic: Eye Care
Bringing Transitions Optical's "Get Sighted" initiative to a national level, actor Erik Estrada of the famed 1970's TV show "CHiPs," along with optometrist Larry Lampert, is raising awareness about the importance of healthy sight among consumers across the country.  Over the past few months, Estrada, as a Healthy Sight Officer, has already led the Healthy Sight Patrol through the streets of New York City and at the Transitions Championship in the Tampa Bay area to distribute "Sight-Ations" for violations such as "Visual Abandonment" and "Indecent Exposure" to consumers who were not wearing proper UV-blocking eyewear while outdoors.  Now, Estrada has teamed up with Dr. Larry Lampert to educate consumers nationwide about year-round eye health. That's a post from the PRNewsWire.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 6:59 AM EST
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Wednesday, 10 November 2010
Bionic Eye Gives Sight to the Blind
Topic: Eye Care
A 46-year-old man thought he would never see again after a devastating eye disease robbed him of his sight," according to the DailyMail.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 5:58 AM EST
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Saginaw ECP Gets $25,000 Grant
Topic: Eye Care
The Saginaw Area Foundation for Eye Care was one of four Saginaw health care providers to receive $15,000 grants from Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan. Teh grants are a part of the insurer's Strengthening the Safety Net program. That's the report from mLive.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 5:51 AM EST
Updated: Thursday, 11 November 2010 7:10 AM EST
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Tuesday, 9 November 2010
VA Caused Blindness in 87-Year-Old Vet
Topic: Eye Care
"The federal government has agreed to pay $250,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by an 87-year-old veteran who alleged that he became legally blind as a result of negligent medical treatment at the Palo Alto veterans hospital," reports the MercuryNews. "The investigation revealed the hospital's optometrists had not followed an internal policy that required all patients with glaucoma to have their treatment overseen and reviewed by an ophthalmologist, a medical doctor that specializes in eye care."

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:12 AM EST
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Your Customers Might Have Read about the New Hypnotic CLs
Topic: Optical--Sort Of

SpoofTimes has posted the following:

A new technology is in testing right now, Hypnotic Contact Lenses. This is a new and clear contact lenses have nano technology on it that will have the the wearer to hypnotize the person who's looking directly the wearers eyes.


The lens operates as with the thought of the wearer as he dazzled the victims with the wearers eyes. The lens will make the victim look to the wearers eyes and gives off small instances making the wearers eyes in a white color. The hypnotist will then give a verbal command to the victim and the victim suppose to obligate the wearers command.

In case a customer comes in asking, you might want to remind them that SpoofTimes is precisely what its name implies--satire.

 


Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:08 AM EST
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UK Spending Too Much on Eye Care
Topic: Eye Care
"Its on-the-ground research...shows that public sector organisations could be collectively overspending up to £127 million (£1 equals about $1.60) on obligatory eyecare for their staff," says an article posted on PersonnelToday. The British opticians group, Specsavers, "has discovered that poor procurement decisions are resulting in public sector organisations typically spending between £50 and £80 per employee, and some as much as £200. This service can in fact be provided for as little as £17 per employee.  With virtually all jobs now entailing some use of visual display units, multiplied by the 6.051million people employed in the public sector, this could result in a massive overspend in the region of £127million." It's a wonder if the American public sector could learn from this study.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:05 AM EST
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Sunday, 7 November 2010
Health Care Providers Need Eye Exams to Avoid Car Accidents?
Topic: Contact Lenses
Acording to a press release from Confusion.com, health care professionals file the most car insurance claims: "GPs make more car insurance claims than any other profession, a new survey has suggested. Some 33% of GPs registered with the price comparison website confused.com claimed in the past year, according to its own research.They were closely followed by others in the medical profession, including psychologists (30%), district nurses (30%), hospital doctors (29%) and dentists (27%).Even 27% of opticians  [our emphasis] claimed for an incident in the last 12 months, followed by 26% of police officers."

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 10:00 PM EST
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Darts Champion Need Glasses
Topic: Eye Care

In the U.S., people shot darts in bars until they are half in the bag. In the U.K., it's a sport--a professional sport worth hundreds of thousands to winners. That explains why the following story was front page news for the Sun.

Phil Taylor [champion darts player] has been told that he needs glasses.

Opticians say the sharpest eye in darts should wear specs on the oche, starting at next week's Grand Slam.

It comes on the back of The Power's worst run of form in almost three years - with three defeats in a fortnight.

Taylor, 50, said: "Maybe that explains why I'm suddenly losing matches - it's because I can't see the board.

"As long as I don't look like Ugly Betty I don't care."

 

 


Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 7:09 AM EDT
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Saturday, 6 November 2010
RI Teenager Gets Infection from Decorative CLs
Topic: Contact Lenses

Despite the warning from optical groups and the FDA, which appeared on scores of websites and in scores of newspapers, a Rhode Island teenager still purchased decorative CLs. Here's the beginning of the story that appeared on the Providence Journal's website, Projo: "A high school student developed severe eye problems after illegally purchasing decorative contact lenses from a convenience store and wearing them at Halloween, according to the state Health Department."

Optical News from OpticalCEUs also heard that a Halloween store in Massachusetts was selling decorative CLs.


Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 9:43 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 6 November 2010 10:12 AM EDT
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Safilo Reports Sales Gain in U.S.
Topic: Eyewear

"Safilo reported a 400,000 euro ($562 million) loss in the three months ending September, compared with a 50 million-euro loss a year earlier, the Padua, Italy-based, company said today in a statement. That beat the 11.2 million-euro loss average estimate of eight analysts on Bloomberg." That's the report that appeared on Bloomberg. "Sales rose almost 12 percent to 237.9 million euros, compared with the 230.3 million-euro estimate by 10 analysts in a Bloomberg survey. Sales gained almost 30 percent in Asia, 21.7 percent in the U.S., and 5.7 percent in Europe, Safilo said."

The reported increase in U.S. sales might hint at  the beginning of a turnaround in the U.S. optical market. 


Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 9:33 AM EDT
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Programs Help Restore Sight in Africa
Topic: Eye Care

The NevadaAppeal posted the following:

Near Gilgil, deep in the Rift Valley of Kenya, there is a “Granny Club” consisting of native African grandmothers who are raising their orphaned grandchildren. A program to teach the grandmothers to read was failing miserably until it was discovered that the grandmothers could not see well enough to read.

Then several of the grandmothers were fitted with affordable eyeglasses at the Rotary sponsored eye clinic at the nearby St. Mary's Mission Hospital. Now the grandmothers are learning to read...

Meanwhile Voice of America notes that "a non-governmental organization in Nigeria called Sightsavers is working to help restore sight to visually impaired people. The Federal Ministry of Health recently conducted a survey on visual Impairment.  It found that about 1,130,000 people in Nigeria are blind.  More than a third of them are in the northwestern states."


Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 9:26 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, 6 November 2010 9:47 AM EDT
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Duffer Reports His Experience with Eye Surgery
Topic: Optical
"For those of us who wear glasses or contact lenses, playing golf is one of those occasions when we curse our poor vision. As a reasonably OK golfer, I decided long ago that hitting the ball in the middle of the club head is hard enough without trying to keep your glasses perched on the end of your nose, so I was forced to invest in contact lenses," reports Mike Norrish in the British Telegraph. He then gives up on CLs to try...

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 9:22 AM EDT
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Friday, 5 November 2010
Seeing the Galaxies with New Vision Aid--Sort of
Topic: Optical--Sort Of
"Using the world's largest space telescope, ESA's Herschel Space Observatory, a UK-led team has discovered a new way of locating a natural phenomenon that acts like a zoom lens, allowing astronomers to peer at galaxies in the distant and early Universe," according to a Sify post.

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 8:09 AM EDT
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Superfocus (TruFocals) Go Ballistic
Topic: Eyewear
A WSJ blog noted recently that "when NASA’s Shuttle Discovery blasts off into space this week, two of its six astronauts will be sporting...Superfocus glasses [formerly TruFocals]...Traditional bifocals and other glasses have long been used in space. But Dr. C. Robert Gibson, a vision consultant to NASA, suggested using the Superfocus glasses because they can be adjusted and give wearers a wide field of view. That’s especially important for astronauts who often have to look above them at monitors."

Posted by ct3/opticalceu at 8:07 AM EDT
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