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going to a different doctor

post #1 of 12
Thread Starter 
I am having a problem with my eyes. I have been seeing the same eye doctor since I was a kid, and I am very comfortable there. However, they are located over an hour away. Aditionally, they dont accept the insurance that I have (not the end of the world).

So my question is do you go to a more convienent doctor, closer to where I live/work who I have no relationship with (I mean its an eye doctor, not a shrink), or bite the bullet and take time off work, head down there, and go to who I have been seeing.

Also, would you go to a retail clinic (think lenscrafters, etc...)?


My caveat for this particular question is that I dont think my problem is prescription related, all the sudden I am having a hard time focusing and I feel pressure in my eyes. Given that this is slightly abnormal, would that change your recomendation?
post #2 of 12
Why wouldn't you just find an eye doctor that takes your insurance and is closer?
post #3 of 12
Another possibility: Search for best eye doctors in your state/area and see who pops up. May or may not take your insurance, but if you have a problem, catching it early and having the best treatment seems better than getting the best deal.
post #4 of 12
You have to figure out what the most important aspect of your doctor-patient relationship is. Is it the convenience, the insurance (not a good criteria unless money is really a big issue for you), or your health? All three are probably important, but which is primary? You're probably going to need to see an ophthamologist, anyway, instead of an optometrist, so they'll likely be referring you. If I were you, I would call the doctor I have a good relationship with, tell him what's going on and that it isn't convenient for you to travel so far for appointments for this problem and ask him for a referral to someone closer. He'll have a better chance of knowing who he thinks is good and it's a win-win. We get requests like this all the time and it's no offense from the doctor's perspective.
post #5 of 12
I would get the prescription from your current eye doctor and maybe shop around for other places for frames and lens that do accept your insurance- thats what I do now.

If you feel pressure in your eyes I'd go to an opthamologist to get it checked out.
post #6 of 12
Get a new doc. Get it checked out asap. Might not be anything bad at all but something simple like needing a stronger script or dry eyes.
post #7 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by dragon8 View Post
I would get the prescription from your current eye doctor and maybe shop around for other places for frames and lens that do accept your insurance- thats what I do now.

If you feel pressure in your eyes I'd go to an opthamologist to get it checked out.

+++ lurker here but joined to comment... please be sure to get it checked out by a physician, NOT an optometrist. Ophthalmologists are MDs that specialize in treating eye pathology - Optometrists may be able to recognize some eye pathology but are not trained to treat it... Could be nothing, but could be something you NEED treated ASAP. I'd go to a primary care physician and see whether or not they feel a referral to an ophthalmologist is warranted (In Canada, we need referrals to specialists from a family doctor, don't know if you can directly access specialists in the US).
post #8 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by mcpherv View Post
+++ lurker here but joined to comment... please be sure to get it checked out by a physician, NOT an optometrist. Ophthalmologists are MDs that specialize in treating eye pathology - Optometrists may be able to recognize some eye pathology but are not trained to treat it... Could be nothing, but could be something you NEED treated ASAP. I'd go to a primary care physician and see whether or not they feel a referral to an ophthalmologist is warranted (In Canada, we need referrals to specialists from a family doctor, don't know if you can directly access specialists in the US).

Depending on your healthplan one may need a referral to see a specialist.
post #9 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by dragon8 View Post
Depending on your healthplan one may need a referral to see a specialist.
Thanks for the point of clarification! If that's the case for the OP, then he definitely should see his family doctor (MD - not optometrist) ASAP to ensure its nothing serious. EDIT: Or if its getting worse - emerg.
post #10 of 12
finding a trustworthy doctor is not easy. if they're only an hour away you should be able to get there pretty easily ... i travel 4 hours to see certain docs
post #11 of 12
You are entitled to a second opinion. Make sure the doc knows that he/she is seeing you for a second opinion.
post #12 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by scientific View Post
finding a trustworthy doctor is not easy. if they're only an hour away you should be able to get there pretty easily ... i travel 4 hours to see certain docs

Finding anyone trustworthy is hard enough.

4 Hours? Where do you live?
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