What a year! We just started and the pandemic hit. Businesses closed, restaurants were take-out only, and good luck getting a haircut or toilet paper. Slowly, the country re-opened with mask requirements, maximum capacities, and short supplies of PPE. Optometry was not immune to this new normal, but we continued to remain on the front-line serving our patients. To add to the mix, later in the year, the FTC imposed mandatory contact lens documentation. Despite these adversities, the POA forged ahead and was successful in passing a modernization of the Optometric Practice Act. The amended Act removes the Secretary of Health from the pharmaceutical approval process and places the management of the profession where it needs to be: the Pennsylvania State Board of Optometry. Additionally, the new Act allows for Epi-Pen use and removes the 6-week restriction for all forms of glaucoma, dry eye, and allergic conjunctivitis. Who would have ever imagined that 2020, The Year of the Eye Examination, would be so “exciting”?
Despite that excitement and the challenges it resulted in, the POA has adapted well to these COVID times. The executive director and staff were proactive and prepared well in advance for the work-from-home environment. Committees worked non-stop to modify meetings, offer virtual education, and retain business partners. Zoom meetings and remote access became the norm. Meetings changed from live to remote, and live meetings became sensitive to social distancing. Details, too many to count, have all been handled flawlessly. Thank all of you for your extraordinary effort in keeping the organization moving forward.
Twenty twenty-one may well be the year remembered as, “The Year of the Vaccine.” The POA and AOA continue to advocate for optometrists, as front-line healthcare providers, to be some of the first to be vaccinated. The response from the Secretary of Health is positive as the definition for those initially eligible will be broad and inclusive. We stepped up and have been recognized for the excellent primary care services that we provide to the people of Pennsylvania.
My hope for 2021 is that it is remembered as the year that all of the children of Pennsylvania have the opportunity to be on an even playing field upon entering the realm of academia. Pennsylvania has an estimated 400,000 children in pre-school through the sixth grade. According to public health statistics, 3% to 7% (28,000) of those children will have a visual disability. These vision disorders are the fourth most common disability in the United States and the most prevalent handicapping condition in children. Since vision screenings miss at least half of these maladies, we can no longer ignore this pressing public health issue. Pennsylvania State Representative Zimmerman, with the strong support of the POA, has proffered legislation that will address this inequity by mandating vision examinations for all children entering school and at significant developmental milestones thereafter.
Additionally, members of the POA’s Children’s Vision Care Alliance (CVCA) are committed to elevating the visual well-being of children by adhering to set standards, intervening at refractive and functional levels when necessary. More details can be found at https://pennsylvania.aoa.org/doctors/poa-member-resources/childrens-vision-care-alliance. The entire POA Board has been charged with working to make this a reality and we are asking for your support.
Together, let’s make this a year to remember, for the kids and Pennsylvania Optometry.
Edward Savarno, O.D.
POA President