- Committee spotlight: AOA’s Meetings & Member Experiences Committee
- Making her dream a reality
- Student-centered initiatives promote optometry careers
- 1 year strong, Myopia Collective advancing a new standard of care
- Elevating optometry by advocating for dry eye patients
- Congratulations to the AOA’s 2025 award winners
- Inspiring optometry’s next generation
- A passion for grassroots
- Bringing the optometric community together
- Optometry finds voice in influential society
- Remembering Debbie Hettler
- Part of the solution
- ‘Changing the face of how we practice’
- On the radar: Emerging technologies
- Lessons in staff retention from a 50-year-practicing paraoptometric
- Remembering Virgil Deering
- Understanding the past to inform a better future
- 5 ways to center patient care
- AOA members help Olympians gain an edge
- ‘Advocacy is our history and our future’
- Putting the spotlight on optometry’s stars
- Tennessee Welcomes You to Optometry’s Meeting
- Member in Focus - Dr. Thuy Tran
- Intentional leadership
- Congratulations to the AOA’s 2024 award winners
- 115 years of family eye care
- Optometric foundation’s track record leads to $2.5 million grant for children’s eye care in Ohio
- Honoring Charlotte Ferris’ dedication to optometry
- Representation matters in optometry
- Remembering a true friend of optometry: Patricia Hopping
- AOA’s prestigious leadership program graduates another class
- Inspiring the next gen of contact lens leaders
- Seeing potential
- Taking eye care advocacy to a global scale
- Embracing the journey
- Born to serve: Active duty paraoptometric professionals provide critical care
- ‘Raising the ceiling’
- Honoring the profession’s finest at Optometry’s Meeting 2023
- Why proper documentation is vital
- Change agent
- The power of ‘yes’
- AOA immediate past president: Our biggest challenges
- Optometry through Bubba’s eyes
- Congratulations to the AOAs 2023 award winners
- Andrew Kemp AOA’s 2022 Educator of the Year transitions students from talking in question marks to talking in period
- Distinguishing service
- Successes in diabetes care
- Shantia-Hinderlider-humanitarian-heart
- Glen Steele honored in retirement
- Art Epstein
- Next-level-Loretta-Eriks-CPOT
- Davidoff award
- Optometry’s Meeting 2022 is in the books
- Chicago things to do
- The next generation of optometrys leaders
- 2022 Hall of Fame
- Sullins Award Winner
- A great fit
- Ukrainian refugees find succor in AOA doctor executive director
- Candidates announce bids for Board of Trustees elections
- annual award winners
- women in optometry
- Care close to home
- Emerging leader
- How one doctor lives a life of service
- Jerald Combs Obit
- Connecting with patients as paraoptometrics
- Building relationships
- Persistence pays off
- Advocacy from academia
- Women make giant strides
- AOA Board of Trustee Resolutions 2020
- C Clayton Powell O.D. Obit
- James A Boucher Obit
- Irving Bennett O.D. leaves legacy
- Janet Millis finding her place
- Changing of the guard 2020
- AOA 2020-21 election
- AOA doctors frontline care
- 2020 hall of fame inductees
- members carry the message 2020EyeExam into the future
- When student becomes teacher
- Jeni Kohn Vision Quest Young Optometrist Year
- AOA Board resolves advocacy public awareness in New Year
- nominate Hall of Fame
- AOA honors active-duty sacrifice of Army doctor of optometry
- From small-town to big deal
- AOA Board of Trustee Resolutions 2019
- How doctors of optometry contribute to Air Force mission
- Kneib longtime AOA leader leaves legacy
- Morrow Optometric Family
- AOA member has a super role for NFL team
- Taking pride in what you do
- Longtime AOA volunteer member Frank Fontana OD dies
- a profession of their own
- Doctor of optometry on MasterChef
- Hawaii doctor takes volcano in stride
- A patient person
- Pick Up the Pieces
- Removing the barriers
- Another New Year happily practicing optometry
- 101 years all in the family
- Doctor Levin Obit
- Family tree blooms with doctors of optometry
- Reaping what we sow
- AOA offers condolences to family of Richard L Wallingford Jr OD
- Hollywoods eye experts
- Black History Month AOA doctors rise to occasions
- Longtime AOA California optometric leader and educator dies
- Civil rights leader remembered as heroic and selfless by one doctor of optometry
- All in the family The Castellanos
- All in the Family The Botwins
- War stories Retired doctor receives Frances highest military honor
- All in the family Three generations of eye care
- Opening doors
- Optometrys Family Portrait
- Optometrys eyewitness
- Teachable moments
- doctor of optomtery stays focused in Ferguson Missouri
- Opticals green makeover hits primetime TV
Leader to leader
June 12, 2022
AOA President Robert C. Layman, O.D., and President-elect James P. DeVleming, O.D., reflect on the challenges and opportunities ahead for the association and the profession.
Tag(s): Inside Optometry, Member Spotlight
Excerpted from page 16 of the May/June 2022 edition of AOA Focus.
By the time members ascend to the very top leadership roles of the AOA, typically after nearly a decade on the Board of Trustees, they have been steeped in optometry—not only infused by decades of practice experience but also seasoned by the AOA’s dogged commitment to advocacy.
And year after year, that baton is passed.
In a Q&A with AOA Focus, current AOA President Robert C. Layman, O.D., and President-elect James P. DeVleming, O.D., reflect on the challenges and opportunities ahead for the association and the profession ahead of the profession's premier annual event, the 125th Annual AOA Congress & 54th Annual AOSA Conference: Optometry's Meeting®.
What do you think are the AOA’s/profession’s immediate challenges?
Dr. Layman: The most pressing challenges are assuring practice success in the face of high inflation; workforce shortages; additional disinfection/safety protocols; stagnant vision plan reimbursements; online competition; and the increased administrative burden of government regulations such as the signed contact lens prescription acknowledgement and good faith estimates required by the No Surprises Act. Three illogical Medicare physician fee reductions are scheduled over the first six months of 2022, while Congress rewards the Medicare Advantage plans a 7.98% fee increase for 2022—which appears blatantly unfair. It reinforces the critical need for a strong AOA to help health policy decision-makers understand and respect our vital contribution to the nation’s health.
Dr. DeVleming: The AOA and the profession’s immediate challenge is to make sure we, our staff and our patients deliver/receive needed ocular care safely and effectively while continuing to deal with the ramifications of COVID-19. Moving forward, the profession must continue to grow and expand the care we deliver. America’s population is aging, meaning our patients will need more care—whether dealing with such health issues as glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration, cataract co-management or diabetic issues as well as all the visual changes that come with birthdays. Our profession is at the forefront in providing those services and we, as the AOA, need to make sure member doctors are educated, trained and confident in their skill set to deliver these services at the highest-quality levels our patients deserve.
What opportunities are before the AOA and the profession?
Dr. Layman: I see our profession’s biggest opportunity as the ability to provide contemporary optometry services by dedicated and caring doctors to every citizen. Our wide, geographic distribution in over 10,000 communities puts us on the front lines of primary eye and vision care while the number of eye surgeons is stagnant and the demand for services is ever-increasing. The VA system has recognized our role, rescinding a ban on laser procedures by doctors of optometry and utilizing them at their highest level of scope of practice under its new national practice standards. New technology that helps us more effectively manage chronic conditions such as dry eye, glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration and progressive myopia will certainly help the growth of the profession. Our strong AOA presence in Washington, D.C., helped us act in the name of patient safety by providing the evidence that led the Federal Trade Commission and the Department of Justice to sanction and fine Hubble Contacts. Averting a 10% Medicare fee reduction, scheduled for Jan. 1, 2022, was a highlight of our federal advocacy program, as was inclusion in COVID-19 relief funds that netted the profession $2.1 billion.
Dr. DeVleming: Our opportunities are grand! We are on the front of the line when it comes to delivering ocular and visual care. All we need to do is reach out and grab our future and then show the world how great we are when it comes to anything eye related. We have the opportunity to expand our membership base by reaching out to and including as members those underrepresented provider groups, which in turn will help all citizens receive the care they need and want. We have the opportunity to mentor our younger family by working more closely with schools of optometry, helping to make sure new graduates are ready for the world they are entering and realizing what a strong partner the AOA is for them. And finally, we can continue to educate elected officials and regulators at the federal and state levels about optometry and how we are an integral part of the health care world.
How does the AOA’s work help doctors and patients?
Dr. Layman: The work of the AOA helps doctors of optometry provide advanced, contemporary eye care and vision services to meet an ever-greater need in their communities. The AOA education resources, combined with tools for practice success through AOAExcel®, are invaluable as we all face the headwinds mentioned. The AOA can most effectively tell the story of the value of our services to the public and health care decision-makers. Our advocacy programs have advanced the scope of practice and recognized the remarkable clinical skill of our caring practitioners. The AOA has protected patients from unscrupulous online purveyors of materials and services that pose a threat to their health. Your AOA staff is incredibly dedicated and talented. Their commitment to the profession is amazing and must be recognized as a secret superpower that is unmatched in our ecosystem.
Dr. DeVleming: The AOA’s work for members is hugely important in helping doctors, which then helps our patients. AOA advocacy is there to make sure optometry stays strong, grows and weeds out the bad actors who are trying to put profit above patient care. AOA education through EyeLearn, evidenced-based optometry, and coding and billing are there to make sure doctors have the knowledge they need to deliver high-quality care and be reimbursed properly for those services. AOA communications through Eye Deserve More and other campaigns are there to educate the public about who doctors of optometry are and what we do, helping patients make more informed choices about their ocular care. The AOA’s work will continue to help us all be better and we, in turn, must help AOA be stronger by becoming and staying members through our entire careers.
Don’t miss a minute of Optometry’s Meeting® 2022
Optometry’s Meeting® takes place June 15-18 in Chicago. Engage with us on social media using our event hashtag, #OM2022, and follow the conversation on our live-running social wall.