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Readers
Predict Growth for Their CL Practices
BY JOSEPH T. BARR, OD, MS, FAAO, EDITOR
We
recently received information from 128 readers who participated in a survey about
a number of issues. This survey indicates that about 50 percent of respondents estimate
that 20 percent to 39 percent of their gross revenue comes from contact lenses;
25 percent estimate that 40 percent or more of their gross revenue comes from contact
lenses. Forty-nine percent of their new fits and refits of contact lenses were hydrogel
and 39 percent were silicone hydrogel. Seventy-two percent of the respondents plan
for their contact lens practice to increase. Regarding fits and refits of GP lenses, six
percent are spheres, three percent are aspheric single vision, two percent are toric,
three percent are bifocal/multifocal and one percent are orthokeratology. While
67 percent of respondents see their GP practice as stable and 15 percent see it
decreasing, 18 percent expect it to increase.
The
respondents report that on average, 56 percent of the lenses they use are spherical
soft, 20 percent are toric soft and nine percent are multifocal soft. They estimate
that 22 percent of their fits and refits are for extended wear with soft lenses
and two percent are for extended wear with GP lenses.
It appears that half of our respondents' presbyopic contact lens
wearers use monovision while half use multifocal lenses.
While two-thirds of the respondents prescribe up to 10 prescriptions
for allergy per week, 15 percent prescribe 11 to 20 such prescriptions. Seventy-seven
percent prescribe up to 10 antibiotic prescriptions per week and nine percent prescribe
11 to 20 antibiotic prescriptions. Ninety percent of the respondents were optometrists.
One alarming statistic that this survey revealed is that 38 percent
of the respondents fill contact lens prescriptions only when asked and two percent
never fill them.
Contact Lens Spectrum, Issue: December 2005