- AOA Innovation Hub premieres at Optometry’s Meeting®
- Medicare Advantage Risk Adjustment audits are overwhelming optometry practices
- This members-only benefit offers something for everyone
- Take a strategic approach to Medicare Advantage records requests
- How to launch a successful career in optometry
- A voice for independent doctors
- Are you prepared?
- How to fill your staffing needs
- The latest on AI and optometry
- More courses, more uses, more impact: Why more AOA member doctors, staff are turning to AOA EyeLearn
- Master paraoptometric certification exam prep with AOA’s study resources
- 5 things every office needs to practice full-scope optometry
- Why thriving practices are prioritizing retirement plans
- What happened to the FTC’s noncompete ban?
- Keeping your practice (and finances) safe
- Is your exam chair ADA compliant?
- 2.9% Medicare cut, broadly panned, looms over 2025 as advocates press Congress
- How to navigate political conversations in your practice
- Making the grade
- Does your malpractice insurance provider measure up?
- The power of delegation
- New technologies shaping optometry’s future
- How AOAExcel makes your life easier
- Next-gen optometry’s focus on independent practice
- Inferiority complexity?
- Is your staff connected? How peer connections benefit practices
- Protecting patient privacy when a clinical observer visits
- Does your practice do in-house billing? Here’s something to know
- Where to start? The tools and resources to leave a positive impact on your patients and community
- AOA boosts support for optometrists rocked by Change Healthcare cyberattack
- Be aware of new classification of employee vs. independent contractor from labor department
- Why optometrists love the AOA Business Card
- Paraoptometric Month
- Patient intake coding for medical diagnoses
- Set your practice up for success
- New federal Corporate Transparency Act
- How to compete with online sellers
- CMS finalizes 2024 physician fee schedule: AOA’s 8 takeaways for optometry
- How do you measure success in your practice?
- 4 tips to elevate the profession and educate the public
- Now we’re talking: Communicating with the public
- Level up your optometric surgical team: AOA launches surgical assistant coursework
- 4 essential personal financial tools for optometrists
- Coding for orthoptic training
- New remote testing option for paraoptometric certification saves time, distance
- Testing 1, 2, 3 … paraoptometric exam handbook, resources for certification testing
- 6 things every hiring practice owner should include in a career center listing
- Now we’re talking: Patient communication
- AOA, leading schools organize to safeguard and expand optometry’s independence
- Co-managed care rife with success stories for patients, doctors
- 3 ways to grow careers and practices at Optometry’s Meeting® 2023
- Why disability insurance is crucial
- Now we’re talking: Interprofessional communication
- Build your practice and protect the planet
- You’ve been served—now what? Where ethical intersects legal
- DEA’s new opioid training mandate: What you need to know
- How to handle bad reviews and ratings
- How the updated position statement can help guide telemedicine in optometry
- 3 questions to ask your malpractice insurance agent
- AOA Antitrust Compliance Policy
- How the AOA Business Card can benefit your practice
- Combatting inflation
- How to earn an MBA while practicing
- AOA’s new Center for Independent Practice to amplify members-only resources for practice success
- Window Tinting
- The most important thing to know about retirement savings planning
- bolster your cybersecurity
- Identity Theft
- How the HIPAA Privacy Rule applies in a public health emergency
- Partners in care
- 4 tips for handling payer clawbacks: What the experts say
- When patients defect: A case study in emotional intelligence
- A career choice
- Be proactive: Identifying improper sales programs, financial incentives
- Scope of practice and malpractice insurance
- website ADA compliance
- Which retirement plan is right for you
- AOA practice success initiative can help with payer issues
- The most important questions to ask about disability insurance
- audio-only telehealth
- A case study in professionalism
- How to eliminate bias in the exam
- Keeping the practice’s mental health top of mind
- Managing expectations Telemedicines next step
- Optometrys Meeting Surgical Saturday
- 5 ways AOA membership can bring your practice success
- 6 ways to make a job posting pop
- The impact of paraoptometric certification
- AOA EyeLearn revamp improves accessibility of CE resource
- Good faith estimate requirement takes effect
- Optimize your student loan repayment strategy
- How to speak the universal language of care
- How to Obtain Hospital Privileges
- 4 common misconceptions about life insurance
- The privileges of providing care
- How team learning improves doctor-staff coordination
- Pandemic savings strategies
- doctor-patient-communication
- AOA 2021 Virtual Learning Livecast opens for registration
- Virtual interview tips for employers and applicants
- Paraoptometric Exam Materials & Certification
- Keeping the medicine in telemedicine
- Know your options
- Business transition tips for buying or selling
- The wrong patient communication plan could be costly
- New must have resource by AOA for MIPS providers
- AOA faults Ophthalmology journal MIPS study
- Doctors find lessons and success in applying for lifeline PPP loans
- AOA MORE takes yearlong pause
- New rules ahead for patient access to electronic health records
- 7 things to know to protect your future
- PPP Loan Tax Implications
- AOA offers CE-eligible webinar-paraoptometric certification
- 8 lessons the COVID-19 pandemic has taught us
- talking politics keep peace in the practice
- Selling your practice to a private equity firm
- paraoptometric certification
- Life Insurance Awareness Month
- Members support AOA during COVID-19
- VLL courses debut on AOA professional development hub
- Why back to school eye exams are crucial this year
- Protection check-in
- AOA 2020 Virtual Learning Livecast a success
- How to turn your patients into brand ambassadors
- Paraoptometrics have key role in scope expansion
- Communication key unlocking patients virus fear
- lessons from phase one reopening practices
- Report quality measures and MIPS data
- AOA offers guidance for post-COVID-19 reactivation
- How to reduce your carbon footprint
- federal loans ease pain of COVID-19 pandemic
- life insurance questions answered
- ethically providing telehealth services in your practice
- AOA surveys can benefit optometry
- Healthcare cybersecurity
- Doctor google web health-related inquiries can cloud care
- AOAExcel GPO Contact Lenses optical products
- How to get the most out of your AOA member benefits
- How AOA MORE can help you
- Co management 4 steps to success
- What doctors need to know about retirement savings
- Crafting a clickable job posting
- health information cyber attack
- Overtime pay labor law
- Service animals vs emotional support animals in the practice
- InfantSEE tips for children eye exams
- Medicare Beneficiary Identifiers and doctors of optometry
- Physician burnout EHR
- Flushing Hazardous Waste EPA
- Ethically incorporating telehealth-telemedicine services into your practice
- Transition Right
- Frequently asked questions about liability insurance
- How good doctors compete with bad companies
- National Life Insurance Day
- Team effort
- National Retirement Week
- How to become a bilingual practice
- Be a social whiz
- How to balance work and home life
- Physician burnout improving, still high comparatively
- What do patients think about the Open Payments program
- Paraoptometric certification can boost a career
- Doctor of optometry diabetes crusade
- How AOA membership helps protect your practice and the profession
- How to optimize diabetic care
- How to improve patient care and practice economics
- Pediatric Exams Kids Fears
- How to retire with confidence
- CMS ONC send message on faxs demise doctors put them on hold
- Data breaches cost insurers big but providers more frequently
- How to start a sports-vision practice
- 4 practice tips when disaster strikes
- Bad hires happen
- AOA MORE reports first patient data_helps MIPS providers attest
- Keeping up with Doctor Jones
- STEM academia no different Women face harassment
- The dos and donts of customer service
- Medicare repeals payment cap for therapy services
- Earned interest
- Optometrys bread and butter
- Disability Insurance
- Sustainable solutions-Focusing on a green future
- Ethics Disabilities
- Flu Epidemic
- CMS-Texting PHI among health care providers OK with caveats
- TaxTips
- AOA tools you need to succeed
- Keeping peace in the practice during the holidays
- Handle with care How to dismiss a patient
- Cybersecurity Awareness Month
- Dont let your nest egg lay an egg
- How to add a subspecialty to your practice
- Disaster Lessons
- 4 things to consider before volunteering
- Go green and save green
- server and protect
- AOA encourages members to protect themselves against cyberattacks
- Credit breach continues grip on doctors
- AOA cautions against email phishing scams
- AOA to CMS Significant changes needed to MIPS proposed structure
- Caution email phishing scam
- EBO Guidelines in Practice
- Aging Eyes
- Sunshine Act-Industry Reports
- the-best-defense-against-office-harassment
- Review practice policies on harassment
- Cybersecurity and Cyber Monday
- Medicare Part D drug costs
- tips to get more pediatric patients through your door
- Windows OS on Life Support
- 9 business solutions for doctors
- Tools of engagement enrolling staff as AOA associate members
- retinol ruses and root veggies-fantastic tale of carrots
- Practice changes can increase office efficiency
- On Employee Appreciation Day show your staff you care
- Data breach implications for tax season
- How to make the most of the media megaphone
- 6 types of photos to share on social media
- Holiday how to gifts goals and goodwill
- Credit freeze hinders PQRS feedback
- Considerations for a comanaged care strategy
- Whats your plan 4 tips for emergencies
- AOA US Postal Service raise awareness on eye health
- 3 solutions for noshow patients
- MACRA final rule offers flexibility
- In case of emergency
- 3 actions to help staff grow
- AOA tool helps solve social networking dilemmas
- AOA asks NBEO for assurances on data
- How to prevent theft
- How to fund a retirement program for your practice
- Not meeting attesting to MU Hardship exceptions available
- Malpractice insurance Ensure coverage even after retirement
- Does the white clinical coat matter to patients
- HIPAA Then and now
- Doctors of optometry can play a role in erasing health disparities
- Credit breach continues grip on doctors, students
- AOA member feedback impacts Medicare valuations for services
- How a strong doctor office manager relationship can grow your practice
- Share questions and comments in Ethics Forum
- Think About Your Eyes campaign continues to raise public awareness
- Be prepared for more patients requesting to access their health records
- Medicare Supplier Program Requires Fingerprint based Background Checks
- 4 ways to protect your patients and practice from cyberattacks
- When doctors become patients
- The benefits of a bilingual practice
- Harmed by contact lenses Report now
- Medicare Part D prescribing data offers insight
- AOA nets 2016 Medicare fee schedule wins
- 9 member benefits through AOAExcel
- Health centers to expand services with 500 million grants
- Doctors Are you covered
- Tax law change could impact doctors
- Why doctors of optometry should seek hospital privileges
- CMS issues EHR Incentive Programs final rule
- Cybersecurity Is your patient information practice protected
- Create a space for kids in your office
- Prepare for a shift in credit card fraud liability
- Significant policy change in post-op co-management
- How to go the distance
- Accommodate aging eyes in your practice
- CMS tests Medicare Advantage plan benefit designs
- Get your practice noticed online
- Protect your practice from copyright infringement
- New reports AOA members tally higher incomes
- Position your practice for aging eyes
- Survey Vision insurance sales increase
- 4 paths to practice protection
- Improving patient care with certified paraoptometric staff members
- How to successfully navigate Medicare Advantage plans
- AOA releases directory of accountable care organizations
Optometry’s medical eye care opportunity a boon for patients, coordinated care
February 3, 2023
‘Eyeconomist’ data shows optometry’s market opportunities ‘never better’ with rapidly increasing demand for medical eye care services underscoring the profession’s role in primary eye health and vision care.
Volatility, uncertainty, disruption—all economists’ buzzwords describing the emerging U.S. and global market environment for 2023. But for the ‘eyeconomist,’ the key word for optometry is opportunity.
“This is the greatest opportunity that optometry has ever had as a profession—right now. This is it,” says Richard Edlow, O.D., the Eyeconomist author and industry lecturer.
“There could never be a greater time to be an optometrist.”
Leveraging an economics degree prior to optometry school, Dr. Edlow chaired the AOA’s Information & Data Committee for 15 years and only recently retired from clinical care. Yet that retirement hasn’t slowed a special interest in business and market issues surrounding the eye care profession; it’s only ignited it like a trendline on an exponential growth chart.
In authoring an annual Economic Overview of the Ophthalmic Industry report, Dr. Edlow’s workforce and market analysis of the three O’s—optometry, ophthalmology and opticianry—describes an inflection point many years in the making for optometry.
“Medical eye care is the opportunity,” Dr. Edlow says. “With where the office-based medical eye care is heading, the AOA and state associations have done a phenomenal job of creating a scenario where 98% of doctors of optometry can provide 98% of the care.”
Those estimations are a linchpin to Dr. Edlow’s market analysis, and it’s largely due to a confluence of industry factors that have driven conversations about medical eye care for over a decade; namely:
- Supply of eye care providers.
Where optometry is growing at an annual rate of about 1% with some 48,000 full-time equivalent (FTE) doctors, ophthalmology remains virtually stagnant at nearly 16,000 FTE doctors and near-equal entrants versus departures year-over-year from that profession. By Dr. Edlow’s estimation, the total number of all eye care provider FTEs should grow by about 6,700 providers to nearly 71,000 by 2030. - Demand for medical eye care services.
Likewise, the overall demand for medical eye care services is expected to balloon, corresponding to the increasing size of the over-65 age group. Whereas this group represented 15% of the total U.S. population in 2016, it is projected to account for 21% by 2030 with 73.1 million people and 23% by 2060. As Dr. Edlow notes, data shows over 93% annual utilization rates for medical eye care services among that 65 and older population as compared to a 53% annual utilization rate among 16-to-64-year-olds. He posits that demand for medical eye exams will increase over 25% between 2020 and 2030, or about 15 million additional medical eye exams in 2030 than were provided in 2020.
“There’s a huge gap in being available to meet that increasing demand,” Dr. Edlow says. “So, who are you going to call? Optometry.” - Leaning into providers’ strengths.
Further diving into the data, Dr. Edlow notes how demand for common, often age-related ophthalmology procedures will increase commensurate to trends in the aging population while FTE ophthalmology numbers remain virtually stable. For example, about 4.2 million cataract surgeries were provided in 2020 with an estimated 16,042 FTE ophthalmologists available whereas by 2023 those figures increase to 5.6 million procedures and 16,518 FTE ophthalmologists. While not nearly as profound, similar trends appear for other age-related conditions, such as glaucoma, age-related macular degeneration and diabetic retinopathy, through the current decade.
“The average ophthalmologist performs 400 cataracts a year, so that would mean we need 3,500 additional ophthalmologists just for cataract surgery—forget everything else—and we’re only going to have 500,” Dr. Edlow says. “So, ophthalmologists will be spending more and more time in their surgical facilities, and less and less time providing all that medical, chronic eye care.
“There’s this huge increase in demand for age-related medical eye care and ophthalmology isn’t there,” he adds.
Simple supply and demand indicates ophthalmology’s workforce will not be able to meet the spike in demand for age-related medical eye care services, yet optometry stands ready to fill the gap in providing this primary eye health and vision care.
In referencing the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ (CMS’) 2019 Physician Utilization and Payment data—as opposed to 2020 data as an outlier—Dr. Edlow posits that while about two-thirds of optometrists billed Medicare fee-for-service (FFS) that year, only about a third of optometrists billed Medicare FFS for at least one diagnostic test, such as visual field, optical coherence tomography or fundus photography. In Dr. Edlow’s view, this indicates an opportunity for the profession to grow further in not only diagnosing but treating medical eye conditions.
“I encourage doctors to envision their practices providing at least 50% medical eye care services,” he says. “Start thinking about what do you need—what equipment, facilities or technicians—and do that sooner rather than later.”
Studying the workforce
In 2014, the AOA partnered with the Association of Schools and Colleges of Optometry (ASCO) in producing a National Eye Care Workforce Study to quantify the profession’s supply and demand for eye care through 2025. Updated in 2017, that workforce study looked at the impact of the aging population with particular attention to rates of Type 2 diabetes, as well as the impact of coverage expansion under the Affordable Care Act.
While that study concluded there was an adequate supply of eye care providers, inclusive of projections of new eye doctors, to meet projected demand for eye care through 2025, it also served to make a case for optometry’s involvement in medical eye care.
“What does this [data] mean? It means greater opportunity for ODs to provide full-scope care, not at the exclusion of comprehensive, routine vision care, but to the inclusion of the medical side as well,” noted Randolph Brooks, O.D., AOA past-president and AOA-ASCO Workforce Study Project Team chair, during Optometry’s Meeting® 2014 in Philadelphia.
Dr. Brookes added that optometry wouldn’t realize that increased demand without doctors of optometry practicing full-scope, medical eye care.
Ultimately, patients stand to benefit the most from optometry providing this level of care. Per the AOA Health Policy Institute, doctors of optometry practiced in more than 10,176 communities and counties that account for 99% of the U.S. population—and optometry is the sole provider of eye care in a whopping 39% of U.S. counties. Such data reinforces another truth: for many Americans, doctors of optometry are not only the sole provider of eye care but also the only health care provider many will see in any given year.
Even as states currently look to expand and further validate optometry’s scope of practice nationwide, the profession continues to deliver an outsized impact in Americans’ primary eye health and vision care.
“We’re truly in a great profession,” Dr. Edlow says.