EyeWorld December 2020 cover

Read the December 2020 issue


Recent Articles

  • An eye to the future
    The COVID-19 pandemic hit home for our ophthalmology practices in March 2020, closing our offices and surgicenters for all but emergency patients for 10 weeks. This was the reality for many of us. There was an atmosphere of generalized concern bordering on panic in many locations due to a fear of the unknown.
  • Your commitment has made all the difference: A letter to our supporters
    The past year has been a time of unprecedented challenge for the ASCRS Foundation and the thousands of patients in need it serves. Weโ€™ve struggled, adapted, and found new ways to move forward. I am incredibly proud of our resilient team and the hundreds of volunteers whoโ€™ve continued to deliver on our mission.
  • Review of โ€œSurgical management of positive dysphotopsia: U.S. perspectiveโ€
    Cataract surgery is one of the most common surgeries performed annually and is only expected to increase in coming decades due to an aging population. Despite advances in surgical technique, which have significantly improved efficiency, patient safety, and predictability of cataract surgery refractive outcomes, postoperative visual disturbances such as dysphotopsias continue to be a significant contributor to patient dissatisfaction, even in routine cases performed by experienced surgeons.
  • Remembering former ASCRS President Alan S. Crandall, MD
    Alan S. Crandall, MD, passed away on Oct. 2, 2020, due to a sudden illness. Dr. Crandall, 73, served as ASCRS President from 2009โ€“2010, and was an inaugural member of the ASCRS Glaucoma Clinical Committee formed in 1997.
  • Changing perspectives
    For ASCRS members, and our ASCRS staff, 2020 has seen the ultimate examination of our resilience. It would be a tiresome and labored exercise to go through the process of recapping a year that we are all eager to put in the rearview mirror. โ€œUnprecedented.โ€ โ€œDifficult times.โ€ โ€œWeโ€™re in this together.โ€ Each word and phrase has become so ubiquitous they now trigger our brains to tune out whatever follows.
  • ASCRS and ASOA join the Alliance of Specialty Medicine in Virtual Legislative Fly-in
    This year, 15 ASCRS and ASOA members joined more than 100 specialty physicians from around the country, representing the 14 members of the Alliance of Specialty Medicine, in a Virtual Legislative Fly-in, which was held on November 19. Key senators and representatives focused on the healthcare priority issues for the Alliance, followed by a Q&A session.


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