- Understanding the impact of Total Vision vs. VSP settlement for optometrists
- AOA priorities advance as U.S. House approves sweeping legislation
- U.S. senators introduce VBM reform bill amid growing plan scrutiny
- DOC Access Act reintroduced amid growing Capitol Hill vigor for VBM reform
- U.S. House, Senate approve VA OD physician-level recognition legislation
- Citing array of concerns and complaints, Congress ramps up scrutiny of vision benefit manager industry
- AOA-PAC Election Report: Optometry Has Outsized Impact on 2024 Elections
- How the AOA and affiliates are fighting for reimbursement and coverage fairness
- Are you ready for the Eyeglass Rule of 2024?
- NIH, NEI consolidation plan ‘jeopardizes’ vision research, draws AOA opposition
- Bill seeks better fix to Medicare Physician Fee Schedule cuts
- How Chevron ruling could impact optometry
- Takeaways from CMS’ proposed 2025 Physician Fee Schedule
- FTC issues 10-year Eyeglass Rule update as AOA renews demand for crackdown on medical device scammers
- AOA joins other groups seeking Supreme Court reversal of decision favoring ERISA authority
- AOA sees positives in federal children’s eye health legislation
- CMS heeds AOA recommendations on Medicare supplemental benefits
- 'All the advocacy firepower’ called up at AOA on Capitol Hill
- What optometry’s advocates are championing at AOA on Capitol Hill
- Capitol Hill inquiries into plan abuses are expanding
- Vision plan abuses top of mind? Register for AOA’s town hall on reimbursement, coverage fairness advocacy
- 15 advocacy highlights of 2023
- CMS takes aim at Medicare Advantage plans misrepresenting vision benefits
- Fighting for veterans, fighting for optometry
- AOA: No letting up on Eyeglass Rule advocacy
- AOA and AFOS: ‘Cut through the noise’ and empower licensed doctors of optometry to provide greater access to care to veterans
- A force to reckon with
- U.S. House investigative committee calls for scrutiny of vision plans
- Retail optical lobbying group name change allays AOA, affiliate concerns
- Doctors of optometry challenge reasoning behind proposed Eyeglass Rule changes at FTC workshop
- Contact lens safety legislation proposes banning robocalls
- Help voice optometry’s priorities at AOA on Capitol Hill: Here’s how
- Part of the solution: Optometry groups join AOA in submitting actionable solutions for workforce shortages
- Hatch Act permits issue advocacy by doctors of optometry
- AOA makes robust rebuttal to FTC over proposed changes to Eyeglass Rule
- DOC Access Act introduced amid growing patient calls for Congress to act
- Are you adhering to the Contact Lens Rule
- AOA decries misleading Medicare Advantage advertising
- Gaining access A win for veterans and doctors of optometry
- Congress heeds AOA’s call to stop Medicare pay cuts, but lawmakers’ plan falls short
- Proactive advocacy gets early eyeglass rule gains, notice of potential new burden
- AOA PAC plays outsized role in 2022 midterm elections
- Veterans notch win as VA rescinds restrictive language governing community ODs
- Supporting Medicare Providers Act
- Federal student loan forgiveness: What to know
- Medicare Pay Cuts 2022
- 2022 Capitol Hill Recap
- AOA and South Carolina doctors expose and defeat retail lobby group’s influence scheme
- Medicare Pay Cuts March 2022
- Hold Medicare Advantage plans accountable
- Hubble Contacts slapped with 3.5 million penalties restrictions and supervision
- Medicare pay cuts, once delayed, looming without Congressional action
- Bipartisan AOA-backed bill targeting abusive discount plans gets boost from policy-expert report delivered to Congress
- Advocacy in optometry
- U.S. House, consumer groups mull federal action against DTC contact lens sales schemes
- Medicare Cuts Averted
- Medicare vision efforts fizzle 10 percent pay cuts still loom
- Optometry’s advocates going FAR beyond the call
- Lawmakers host AOA, patient and consumer advocates for VBM abuse briefing as Congress expands probes
- AOA-AFOS make case to Department of Veterans Affairs for access-boosting national practice standards
- Medicare expansion: The long road to here and now
- House pens Medicare vision benefits
- Congress sets deadline to ink Medicare vision expansion language
- White House extends student loan relief, AOA continues push for NHSC inclusion
- 4 questions about Medicare vision expansion answered
- AOA, AFOS work to ensure optometry well represented in formation of national practice standards by Veterans Affairs
- Medicare expansion
- Congress urges administration to fully implement provider nondiscrimination law
- Department of Veterans Affairs Optometry Service and doctors of optometry
- Medicare Vision Expansion
- AOA-backed DOC Access Act reintroduced to combat anti-competitive vision plans
- 2021 Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill Wrap-up
- Contact lens prescription verification failings targeted by new legislation
- Advocacy Bootcamp
- Medicare Telehealth Expansion
- 2 percent Medicare sequester delayed
- Doctors of optometry obtain 2.1 billion in federal relief
- CL rule takes effect
- Medicare Sequester
- Expanded COVID-19 vaccinator workforce includes doctors and students of optometry
- NBEO decisions provoke AOA-AOSA response
- Congress’ COVID-19 relief package HHS funds-ERC extension
- Why staff involvement is critical
- 2021 Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill
- Ohio activates eligible doctors for COVID-19 vaccine administration AOA focuses new relief efforts
- Congress President Biden asked to activate optometry for COVID-19 vaccination response
- AOA- AOSA-backed federal student loan relief extended through September
- AOA takes on anti-optometry lobbying group’s deceptions
- Contact Lens Rule implications key tax and Medicare pay fixes among AOA wins
- AOA and AOSA make appeal to extend suspension of student loan payments
- AOA-backed DOC Access Act gains U.S. Senate companion
- Contact Lens Rule bill gains backing
- Contact Lens Rule changes take effect Oct 16
- 1-800 Contacts notifies patients not to wear AquaSoft lenses due to lens defect
- Contact Lens Rule Modernization Act introduced in the U.S. Senate
- Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill Recap
- Championing paraoptometrics
- Virtual AOA on Capitol Hill 2020
- AOA doctors warn FTC of potential adverse impact of new amendment
- Concerns as optometry students prepare for boards
- Elevating optometry through media advocacy
- AOA finds allies in fight against new FTC contact lens prescription paperwork mandate
- Proposed payment model would have put burden solely on shoulders of doctors of optometry
- Optometry help divert emergent eye cases from ER COVID-19
- Medicaid CHIP relief funds
- AOA address increased cost personal protective equipment
- AOA and state affiliates put optometry's concerns front and center in Washington
- AOA petitions NAVCP member plans temporary relief during emergency
- Pandemic relief bill will help optometry practices nationwide
- AOA mobilizes for doctors in national response to pandemic
- AOA assembles industry leaders set future guidance telehealth services
- AOA secures legislative win provides direction Medicare telehealth services
- AOA calls for FDA investigation into retailers remote vision test
- How and why you should get involved in advocacy
- AOA ensures Medicare legislation recognizes eye exams
- reauthorization of higher education act
- Legislation targets contact lens prescription verification shortcomings
- DOC Access Act fights harmful vision plan abuses
- AOA on Capitol Hill 2019
- The big picture
- AOAs advocacy at top of their game
- Tusculum denied optometry program by institutional accreditor
- Remembering John McCain
- Tusculum media campaign prompts AOA insistence on accreditation standards
- FTC offers revised Contact Lens Rule
- 2018 AOA on Capitol Hill makes history
- AOA on Capitol Hill 2018
- FTC contact lens paperwork proposal update
- FTC workshop wrapup
- Californias congressional delegation joins bi-partisan call to stop FTC paperwork proposal
- Every doc has their day—on the Hill
- FTC Contact Lens Workshop
- DOCACCESS
- FTC Contact Lens Rule Workshop
- Tax Reform Passes
- Scam Alerts
- Better Care Reconciliation Act
- AOAs 247 advocacy is shaping news coverage
- AOA and GOA backed bill take aim at antipatient anticompetitive abuses
- AOA launches Health Policy Institute
- AOA alerts states to NAVCP backed noncovered services bill
- Senate VA chairman deals blow to TECS program
- AOAs patient safeguards reflected in final Cures Bill
- Fullcourt press AOAs 2016 advocacy highlights
- Proposed Contact Lens Rule misguided
- 3 ways to be an all star advocate
- AOA-PAC chair talks importance of contributions
- FTC proposes Contact Lens Rule changes
- AOAs privacy appeal prompts change
- AOA calls for federal investigation
- Bill seeks 90 day EHR reporting period
- Advocates urge federal action against contact lens resellers
- FTC issues warning letters related to Contact Lens Rule
- Recess over Congress considers AOA backed bills
- AOA president stands up for ODs and patients at Senate hearing
- Truth in Healthcare Marketing
- Vision Quest
- AOA provides model legislation to fight forced discounts
- Day of action Grow support for DOC Access Act
- letter from the president prioritizing optometry
- Rumors of meaningful uses demise have been greatly exaggerated
- Year end legislation advances AOA priorities
- Contact lens care guides scrutinized by FDA panel
- AOA-backed legislation aims to boost eye exams among seniors with diabetes
- 3 tips for becoming an AOA keyperson
- Lobbyists hired to oppose AOA ADA backed DOC Access Act
- AOA calls for antitrust protection before Supreme Court case
- New legislation would provide more flexibility in EHR incentive programs
- AOA defends doctors against new attack on Harkin law
- doctors of optometry score win on prescribing law
- AOA submits comments on FTC Contact Lens Eyeglasses rules
- FTC seeks feedback on Contact Lens and Eyeglasses rules
- Rethinking eye health and vision care
- Optometrys advocates mobilize during Congressional recess
- AOA steps up efforts to guide NAM vision study
- AOA advocacy helps avert Medicare cuts in trade bill
- Supreme Court dismisses ACA challenge AOA backed provisions remain in full effect
- AOA lobbies for changes in EHR Incentive Programs
- HHS reverses course on Harkin Law guidance
- AOA advocacy helps shape Cures Act
- Medicare seniors deserve better coverage for eye care
- Optometry takes Capitol Hill
- CMS proposes shorter meaningful use reporting periods
- What you need to know about MACRA the new Medicare pay reform law
- AOA continues fight to improve meaningful use in 2015
- CMS to ease meaningful use reporting periods
- AOA Contact Lens watchdog group to track report illegal contact lens sales
- How to engage with local elected officials
- Medicare payments increase by 75 percent in 10 years
- AOA urges members to lobby for loan repayment bill at CAC
- Congress spending bill addresses optometrys priorities
- Doctors of optometry step up as pandemic sets in
- Medicare pay cuts loom without Congress action
Bill seeks physician-level recognition, more competitive pay and advancement opportunities for VA doctors of optometry
February 23, 2023
Urge lawmakers to support a Senate bill that would recognize the physician-level care doctors of optometry provide and ensure the VA has the tools it needs to better recruit and retain the overwhelming providers of primary and medical eye care for the nation’s veterans.
Tag(s): Advocacy, Federal Advocacy
A bill introduced in Congress would add doctors of optometry to the list of physician-level providers at the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), putting them on par with medical doctors, osteopaths, dentists and podiatrists and better recognizing the value of the eye care they deliver to veterans and their families.
The bipartisan bill, called the VA Clinician Appreciation, Recruitment, Education, Expansion and Retention Support (CAREERS) Act of 2023 (S. 10), would:
- Recognize doctors of optometry as physicians and elevate them to the more competitive, market-based pay scale alongside medical doctors, osteopaths, dentists and podiatrists.
- Make doctors of optometry eligible for supervisory positions now available to a medical doctor, osteopath, dentist or podiatrist.
- Increase the salary cap for doctors of optometry, helping to retain experienced providers and make the VA a more attractive career option.
- Also, make doctors of optometry eligible for $1,000 in annual continuing education costs as other VA doctors are.
These provisions are part of a larger VA workforce bill meant to improve retention and recruitment of doctors, nurses and others, thus providing greater access for veterans seeking eye care and other essential services amid VA staffing shortages.
The AOA and the Armed Forces Optometric Society (AFOS) are working in concert in support of the bill.
“This bill will level the opportunities for optometry within the VA,” AOA President Ronald L. Benner, O.D., says. “It will bring pay parity for our frontline VA providers as well as allow them to rise to leadership roles. Both parity and opportunity have been subjected for too long to the political whims of those who still fail to acknowledge the skills, education and training of doctors of optometry within the VA.
“Physician recognition is the path we’ve been on since Medicare in the 1980s and this is yet another milestone in that many-decades fight,” Dr. Benner says. “We know we are working it at all ends, and everyone should be proud of our significant progress at the local, state and federal levels.”
The bill has the support of the AOA and AFOS, as well as leading veterans’ advocacy organizations such as American Veterans and the Disabled American Veterans—because of what it could mean for veterans’ access to care that is needed and deserved.
“Many very talented doctors of optometry have dedicated their careers to public service, education and research in the VA setting,” says Brian Williams, O.D., AFOS board member who practices in the Cleveland VA Health Care System. “They often hold faculty positions and serve as leaders in ocular disease, TBI rehabilitation and low vision specialty care. Physician recognition and more competitive compensation will help ensure that they can continue in these roles, advancing the profession of optometry and educating future generations of our nation’s primary eye care providers.”
Adds Sean Dempsey, O.D., AFOS board member at the St. Cloud VA Health Care System: “The recruitment and retention of such highly qualified individuals will bolster access to eye care for our nation’s deserving veterans. The patients of VA clinics will benefit from the passage of the CAREERS Act, since it will allow for maintaining their eye care from qualified doctors and in increasing access to that care with a more robust workforce.”
Optometry is the only group of licensed, independent, prescribing practitioners not included on the VA physicians’ pay scale. Optometry is currently excluded from the physicians’ pay table and grouped with chiropractors.
About the bill
The CAREERS Act was introduced by Sens. Jon Tester, D-Mont., and John Boozman, O.D., R-Ark. Sen. Tester has called the VA’s pay system for physicians and other high-level clinicians “antiquated.”
A week ago, the bill cleared the Veterans Affairs Committee and is moving to the full Senate for consideration.
“As chairman (of the Veterans Affairs Committee), I often hear from veterans in Montana and across the country about the lack of providers in rural communities,” Sen. Tester says in a statement by his office. “We need the VA to hire providers faster and be able to retain high-quality talent in rural areas. That’s why I’m proud to be joining my friend Senator Boozman on this bipartisan effort to ensure the VA can recruit the best and brightest clinicians to help deliver veterans—including those in rural areas—their earned health care and benefits.”
Sen. Boozman says the bill would create a “sustainable pipeline” for hiring physicians and fulfill the nation’s promise to the people who served the nation.
Says Sen. Boozman, who has heard similar concerns by veterans: “Our legislation expands the VA workforce in communities nationwide and creates a sustainable pipeline, strengthening its ability to attract expert physicians. Ensuring the VA is properly staffed is key to fulfilling our promise to the men and women who served in uniform.”
Last July, a VA Office of Inspector General (OIG) review showed widespread workforce shortages among clinical and nonclinical positions at VA facilities. “The OIG found that all 139 VHA facilities reported at least one severe occupational staffing shortage,” the review says. “The total number of reported severe shortages was 2,622. Twenty-two occupations were identified as a severe occupational staffing shortage by at least one in five facilities.”
Also last year, nurses at VA centers in New York rallied over chronic short staffing.
As of January 2023, the VA showed 62 openings across the country at its facilities for doctors of optometry. The starting wage for a VA doctor of optometry is listed at about $66,000 for most jobs, before such factors as credentials and experience are considered. VA doctors of optometry are generally compensated $20,000 to $60,000 below that of their private-sector peers in the same communities.
Dr. Benner notes the bill’s commitment to providing access and quality eye care to veterans—advocacy for veterans shared by the AOA. Doctors of optometry provide 70% of essential primary and medical eye care each year to veterans, and eye health and vision care are the third-most requested health care services by veterans, behind only primary care and mental health care.
“Sen. Tester has always been a champion and has fought for the VA patient to have the best access and care available,” Dr. Benner says. “He has been a great friend to our profession and continues to open doors for the care we provide. As the only elected optometrist in the Senate, Sen. Boozman knows and respects the quality of care that his fellow doctors of optometry provide.”
How doctors can support the bill
At the recent AOA Leaders Summit in St. Louis, Dr. Benner laid out the “significant strides” being made in VA policy, despite aggressive opposition by ophthalmology. That progress includes:
Laser ban lifted: “Many of you know that after strategic advocacy on the part of AOA, AFOS and our veteran partners, the VA rescinded restrictive language in a 15-year-old directive that had effectively limited veteran access to therapeutic laser eye procedures at VA medical facilities provided by doctors of optometry. Aside from limiting care that our nation’s veterans need and deserve, this years-long optometric laser ban had been used repeatedly by organized medicine to raise doubt in state houses across the country whenever we were working to expand our state scope of practice. Losing this talking point and advocacy tool angered ophthalmology.”
Language dropped restricting invasive care by doctors of optometry: “Then, recently, the VA again rolled back restrictions that had limited veteran access to care provided by doctors of optometry. The VA dropped language from documents governing its Community Care program, which had prevented community doctors of optometry from providing veterans with so-called invasive care, including injections, lasers and eye surgery. Now, the VA will allow these procedures based on the provider’s state-issued license.”
Now doctors and students of optometry have the opportunity to support passage of the CAREERS Act and help advance physician recognition of doctors of optometry. They can:
- Learn more about the issue by reviewing a fact sheet on the issues.
- Go to the AOA Action Center and reach out to their senators.
“VA optometry has historically led in matters of optometric scope of practice and standard of care,” Lindsay Wright, O.D., AFOS executive director, says. “As the nation’s largest hospital network with locations in every state, VA optometry’s issues can have a great impact on the entire profession. We need everyone’s help!
“There is no doubt we need unified support from all VA optometrists for the CAREERS Act, but we also need support from the optometry community as a whole,” she adds. “We, doctors of optometry, can all benefit from a strong show of support for this bill and its proposed changes for physician recognition and advancement opportunities for optometry.”