• @[email protected]
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    2914 hours ago

    Pay once or pay multiple times a year? LASIK pays for itself, you’ll always be buying glasses and contacts.

    • @[email protected]
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      1413 hours ago

      LASIK isn’t some great cure. It has potential side effects and you can end up seeing worse than you did before.

      • @[email protected]
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        1712 hours ago

        I know I’m just one person, but it was one of the best decisions I ever made. I was almost legally blind without glasses/contacts, and just the stress of making sure my glasses prescription was up to date once I switched to contacts, making sure I packed glasses, contacts, extra contacts, solution, etc, for a trip, and losing 1 contact while at the store or something was instantly erased.

        I could read the street signs on the highway on the way home from the surgery. I hadn’t been able to do that unaided since I was probably 10.

        Do I need readers now that I’m older? Yep, just like they told me I would because everyone does because it’s a different issue that comes with aging. I wish they had a similar treatment for Presbyopia!!!

        Sure, everyone’s experience is different, but it almost was akin to a miracle for me. Life changing for sure.

        • @[email protected]
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          511 hours ago

          And on the other side of the spectrum my friend was at -10, got it done and has been complaining for the past 15 years or more. He can barely drive at night now and it hasn’t fixed all his issues so he still needs glasses and has needed them since the operation (just not as much for his myopia) so he’s not saving any money

          • @[email protected]
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            1011 hours ago

            I’m not doubting at all that there are cases like this and I’m terribly sorry for your friend. I only wanted to present a different perspective for those considering having the procedure. It’s definitely not a decision that should be made lightly.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 hours ago

        Every procedure has that risk, even a routine vaccination or stitches, strange reason to pay for glasses and contacts forever.

        There are people who legitimately can’t get the surgery, but that’s obviously not who’s being discussed here.

        What’s the ratio on people being worse of for vision after? Cant make a claim like that and not provide some data.

        Glasses and contacts also don’t fix the issue and can lead to worse vision too, so arguably that’s non-factor in a discussion like this anyways.

        LASIK is the only chance to have a permanent fix. It’s a very important factor to consider, above and beyond the complications, that are also applicable to the glasses and contacts. I’ve not heard of many people’s vision getting better by their continual use.

        • @[email protected]
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          312 hours ago

          No, what you are comparing to is a one in a million. Lasik has a rather large complication rate with doctors lying about it and using “satisfaction rate” instead of actually counting complications. Basically people think “it’s worth it to have these problems”. But issues like dry eye, halos, glare, shitty night vision are extremely common. They’ll tell you shit like “serious complications are at 1%” when what they mean is 1% go basically blind - or unable to do daily activities like driving at night.

          https://www.fda.gov/medical-devices/lasik/lasik-quality-life-collaboration-project

          46% of participants who didn’t have visual problems before lasik, said they have at least one 3 months after the surgery. 30% had dry eye issues. Those aren’t vaccine numbers.

          • @[email protected]
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            412 hours ago

            Three months after surgery is too early for such a conclusion. It is expected that you still have dry eyes and stuff like that for a larger period of time, around 6 months or so with daily eye drops. Your vision post surgery is also not 100% improved, and gets better for up to a year after, while your eyes and brain adjust.

            Source: my wife had it. Certainly worth it. Your link is not very relevant.

          • @[email protected]
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            12 hours ago

            In October 2009, the FDA, the National Eye Institute (NEI), and the Department of Defense (DoD) launched the LASIK Quality of Life Collaboration Project (LQOLCP) to better understand the potential risk of severe problems that can result from LASIK. The project’s goal was to develop a tool for determining the percent of patients who develop difficulties performing usual activities following LASIK, and to identify predictors for those patients.

            The technology is leaps and bounds better than it was 15 years ago, got anything modern?

            And the risk of your eyes getting worse with glasses and contacts is worse than that, your eyes can’t get better without mechanical intervention, and glasses WILL deteriorate your vision further. It’s 100% with glasses and contacts.

            • @[email protected]
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              25 hours ago

              glasses WILL deteriorate your vision further. It’s 100% with glasses and contacts.

              Do you have anything to share on this? I am asking because I remember I specifically asked my eye doctor this question, and he said no. (I asked something like if there is any downside in wearing glasses always vs only when needed e.g., reading, watching TV etc.).

              I am also wearing the same glasses for almost 13 years now.

          • @[email protected]
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            312 hours ago

            with doctors lying about it

            The last person I spoke with who used those words was trying to convince me she could cure cancer with electricity.

    • @[email protected]
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      712 hours ago

      Really it’s the upfront cost. Over the last 20 years I can say confidently that I have not spent more on corrective lenses than I would have on LASIK, but I’m getting close. I had it priced out last year and it’s about $4500 for the procedure. I’m at a point in my life where I would feel comfortable taking on those payments now. I know growing up there was zero chance my parents could have made it happen for me, it we would have all been starving.

      • Bob Robertson IX
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        511 hours ago

        I kept putting it off… I wanted it when I was 20 but couldn’t afford it. I still wanted it at 30, but didn’t want to spend the money. At 40 I finally had more than enough in my HSA to cover my annual deductable, so I scheduled it. And I’ve LOVED it! However, around 45 I noticed that my near sight isn’t as good as it has been. Now at 48 I’m realizing that I’ll soon need reading glasses.

        I still think it was worth it… but I REALLY wish I had done it in my 20s so I could have enjoyed going glasses free for all those years.

        • @[email protected]
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          410 hours ago

          It’s on my shortlist of things to do and has always been a goal since my teenage years. I’m tired of dealing with lenses.

        • @[email protected]
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          19 hours ago

          I mean, that’s a pretty good run. I’ve never had to wear glasses but now at 41 I need readers when my eyes are tired, and when they’re not they’re working harder for clarity than they ever had to before. I said something to my dad about it a couple years ago as I was first noticing the change and he said, “How old are you? Ah yeah, that’s about the age.” (Yes my dad had to check how old I was. 🙄)

    • @[email protected]
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      512 hours ago

      LASIK procedures are “permanent”, at best, till the patient’s mid-40s. one source.

      Pay once or pay multiple times a year?

      no glasses wearers pay “multiple times a year” for new spectacles and lenses. the frequency does go up to once in two years or once a year after the mid-40s because of presbyopia, but that expense would be incurred anyway whether one gets a LASIK procedure done or not.

      • @[email protected]
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        212 hours ago

        From your own link?

        LASIK eye surgery may mean no more corrective lenses. But it’s not right for everybody. Learn whether you’re a good candidate and what to consider as you weigh your decision.

        And maybe read the information on the over 40, it says laser is a solution to that, it says nothing about it still happening with laser, I think you are conflating issues.

        • @[email protected]
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          211 hours ago

          do take the time to read the full article. particularly the section titled “LASIK vs. Reading Glasses”.

          separately, my cohorts and I are in the mid-40s and have undergone LASIK evaluation. the unanimous consensus given each of us is that we will have to undergo the procedure again and again as our eyes age. that we will have to fall back on glasses.

          i speak from personal experience on this topic.

          • @[email protected]
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            110 hours ago

            Yes there is people for who it can’t permanently fix their vision, that doesn’t mean it’s not possible for others dude.

            • @[email protected]
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              26 hours ago

              Presbyopia is the age-related hardening of the lens and weakening of the muscles used for focusing. The process is progressive and irreversible. Lasik is not a good option for people with presbyopia and any surgeon recommending it is not acting in your best interest as a patient. You should probably seek a second opinion!

      • @[email protected]
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        8 hours ago

        Lasik generally comes with a 20 year warranty. Glasses and contacts come with none. Do you work for a pharmaceutical company? You certainly seem to be shilling temporary treatments rather than even semi permanent cures.

        I’m also in my 40s and would rather pay for a solution that will last till my 60s rather than get glasses every year for 20 years. Lasik is just cheaper in the long run, and the fact that you call it elective would be hilarious, if you weren’t being so conservative.

        Embrace modern medicine.

        • @[email protected]
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          26 hours ago

          The 20 year warranty on Lasik doesn’t guarantee a lifetime of normal vision. The surgery can neither correct nor prevent presbyopia, the most common form of age-related far-sightedness. This reduction in vision is caused by a hardening and loss of flexibility in the lens as well as a weakening of the muscles used for focusing.