Raleigh Opthamology Medical Services

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LIST OF SERVICES & PROCEDURES

What is a Board Certified Ophthalmologist?

Ophthalmologists are physicians concerned with the comprehensive care of the eyes and vision. They are the only practitioners medically trained to diagnose and treat all eye and visual problems including vision services (glasses and contact lenses), and medical disorders of the eye including surgical procedures for treatment. In the United States, in order to obtain the M.D. degree, one must have completed four years of college and four years of medical school.

Certification by the American Board of Ophthalmology is the last step in a long and intensive educational experience designed to assure quality eye care for the American people. The minimum period of training before an Ophthalmologist can apply to sit the examinations is twelve years from high school graduation. The examination process itself takes a minimum of 1-1/2 years, during which time the candidate is usually in clinical practice or in a fellowship program acquiring advanced training in one of the sub-specialties of Ophthalmology.

The Board requires a year of internship following medical school in a hospital program accredited by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education(ACGME) as a pre-requisite for board certification. This year is intended to cement the values and knowledge acquired in medical school. It must include a substantial experience in general medical care. The next 3-4 years are spent in a training program as a resident in Ophthalmology. In order to sit for the Board examinations, the candidate must attend and graduate from one of 123 residency programs in the United States accredited by the ACGME, or in Canada, accredited by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada.

Each program in the United States is periodically reviewed according to a set of rigorous educational standards by the Residency Review Committee of the ACGME. During training, the resident undergoes an intensive period of education that includes the relevant basic sciences, the causes, clinical features, diagnosis, treatment and the pathology of eye disease, clinical eye examination skills and eye surgery. Each year residents participate in a nationwide in-training examination known as the Ophthalmic Knowledge Assessment Program (OKAP), administered by the testing agency ACT on behalf of the American Academy of Ophthalmology. This examination covers the whole field of ophthalmic knowledge, and is designed to assist residents-in-training and teaching faculties in evaluating the progress of each resident. There is no passing score and the examination has no bearing on board certification. The goal of the residency programs is to equip their graduates with the skills necessary to deliver high quality medical and surgical eye care as a comprehensive Ophthalmologist. Upon satisfactory completion of training, the Ophthalmologist may apply to sit for the examinations of the Board.

Certification is a voluntary process. It is granted to those Ophthalmologists who have successfully completed an accredited course of education in ophthalmology and an evaluation including an examination. The examination itself is in two parts. The first part is a written multiple-choice examination administered over half a day. It is designed to assess the cognitive skills of the candidate in the field of Ophthalmology. Candidates who are successful in the written examination progress to the second part, comprised of six timed oral examinations over a three-hour period.

The purpose of this examination is to test clinical problem solving and management skills. In the past, candidates who passed the oral examination were granted a lifetime certificate. Beginning in 1992, the Board has issued only 10 year time-limited certificates. In order to renew Board Certification, holders of time-limited certificates must pass a recertification examination administered by the Board every ten years.

For more information on the services and procedures we provide, please select from the list below.

Cataract Care
Computers and Eye Strain
Contact Lens
Corneal Transplants
Diabetic Eye Disease
Eyeglasses
Floaters & Flashers
General Eye Exams
Glaucoma Treatment & Surgery
Laser for Vision Correction
Learning Disabilities & Vision
Low Vision Rehabilitation
Macular Degeneration
Myopia
No Stitch Cataract Surgery
Pediatric Eye Care
PRK/ALK/LASIK
Ptosis
Retina & Vitreous Surgery
Strabismus
 
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