Get Your Prescription Readjusted By An Eye Optometrist

By Ladonna Chambers


Once a year, every person that wears contacts or glasses should take the time to visit an eye optometrist for a vision exam. Far too often, people procrastinate and put it off until they are experiencing eye problems. Eye problems are usually a sign that a person's current prescription needs to be readjusted to better suit their current visual capabilities.

The same symptoms that might have forced a person to see an eye doctor in the beginning are probably the same symptoms they will experience when it is time for a prescription adjustment. Squinting and headaches are two very common symptoms experienced then the eyes are straining to see well. Some people even find themselves completely unable to read signs from a distance that they once could read perfectly.

The changes happening will likely be very subtle in the beginning, but will progressively get more worse and become a major issue. When an eye exam is avoid for multiple years in a row, it makes it even more difficult to correct a person's vision with any type of lenses. Once a year is typically all that is asked of eye patients. Even the smallest child will only be reexamined once a year and they can experience rapid changes in vision abilities.

As those familiar signs begin to reemerge, there can not be any further delay in getting a new eye exam done. Those familiar signs are usually a result of a needed change in prescription. It is not possible to purchase a new pair of glasses or a set of contacts with a new prescription unless the exam has been done first. The continued use of outdated corrective lenses can exacerbate eye problems tremendously.

During the call to set up an appointment, the receptionist should be informed of the current symptoms being experienced. The desire for a new prescription should also be expressed. This will allow the appointment that is made to be allotted enough time for the exam to be completed and new corrective lenses to be ordered.

There are many offices offering same day service since they make the corrective lenses on location. Offices who do not have this capability will need to send the order to an eye glass store somewhere else. This will usually delay the process of getting your new corrective lenses by about a week. When they are ready and you go to get them, they can be fitted at that time and checked for prescription accuracy.

While waiting on new glasses or contacts, some patients are instructed not to wear their old ones. Others are told to go ahead and use their old ones until the new ones have came in. Every doctor has their own preference and will make a judgement based on each patient's specific situation.

The commons symptoms of an incorrect prescription could be linked to other problems. The important of the exam is being able to rule out those other possibilities. If a yearly visit to the eye optometrist reveals no vision changes, yet symptoms have emerged, there could be other things going on that need to be addressed. Often, you will be sent to another type of doctor for further evaluation and testing.




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