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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 148, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe year was 1891 and the man was Frederick Boger, the first publisher of what today is known as Review of Optometry. But 120 years ago, this publication didn't even have the word optometry in its name. It was called...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 137, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe new Randot Stereo Smile Test, developed by Elise Ciner, O.D., of the Pennsylvania College of Optometry, is a nonverbal, preferential looking stereopsis test, with levels of stereopsis from 480 to 120 seconds of arc....
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 144, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedAfter four years of hard work and rigorous study, new graduates of the Pennsylvania College of Optometry can proudly stare at their well-deserved doctor of optometry degree. However, at this particular optometry school,...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 147, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedSummer booked up already? Not to worry! Save the date for Review's New Technology and Treatments in Vision Care from October 1 to 3 at the Hilton La Jolla Torrey Pines in La Jolla, California! Speakers include chair...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 158, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedOver the past five years, this column has covered many topics related to lenses and prisms, but it has not yet discussed yoked prisms in detail. As we all learned in optometry school, a prism shifts light, and the person...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 146, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedWhen Pennsylvania College of Optometry, my dear alma mater, expanded to offer the doctorate program in audiology, I thought it was a stroke of genius. PCO (now Salus University) had enough sense to realize that...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 142, Issue 7) Peer-ReviewedThe latter half of summer is always an enlightening time for me. It's when we start planning the 2006 editorial calendar. I know that no one wants to think about January when we're barely through the month of July. But,...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 136, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedOptometry school was a big part of my life. I attended Pennsylvania College of Optometry, and received a first-class education attending school in a big city. I even learned stuff at the school. Stuff like, I should...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 147, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedNew developments in cataract and refractive surgery will impact patients' lives now and in the future. Being aware of these will help optometrists remain at the forefront and able to provide proper patient education....
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 143, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedPatient loyalty is not a given. It's something that must be earned and, once earned, must be cultivated consistently to keep. Author Jill Griffin makes that a central lesson in her 2002 book Customer Loyalty. How to...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 136, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedWhich Will You Choose to Grow Your Practice? Dr. Gerber is optometry's most in-demand practice-building and management consultant. He is also the producer of the acclaimed video program, The Power Practice Seminar --...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 62, Issue 35)Guilherme Albieri, senior director of admissions and marketing and international programs, to vice president for student affairs at the State University of New York College of Optometry....
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From:Optometry Times (Vol. 9, Issue 6)I have been fortunate in my professional life to have two mentors who have given me direction and helped expand my optical career into an amazing instrument of communication. I am now able to connect with my peers, and...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 154, Issue 10) Peer-ReviewedAs a college student, Mark Zuckerberg likely never imagined that the simple website he set up to send messages to his classmates would have a global impact on our social interactions and, if the speculation about...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 152, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedSigns and Symptoms A patient with bacterial keratitis will present with a typically unilateral, painful, photophobic, injected eye. Visual acuity may be reduced, and profuse tearing is common. There will be a focal...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 152, Issue 6) Peer-ReviewedSigns and Symptoms While neuroretinitis can present in any age group due to several potential causative etiologies, patients are typically younger, and the condition commonly occurs in children. In fact, the majority...
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From:Optometry Times (Vol. 4, Issue 10)When it comes to fitting patients with progressive addition lenses (PALs), selecting patients who are good candidates in the first place may be the most important part of the process, according to industry consultant...
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From:Optometry Times (Vol. 6, Issue 10)Q How has the academia/corporate transition been different this time around? The difference between when I came from industry to the university, between now and 30 years ago when I came back to Ohio State from Dow...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 147, Issue 9) Peer-ReviewedYou can obtain transcript-quality continuing education credit through the Optometric Study Center. Complete the test form (page 105), and return it with the $35 fee to: Optometric CE, P.O. Box 488, Canal Street Station,...
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From:Review of Optometry (Vol. 149, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedYou can obtain transcript-quality continuing education credit through the Optometric Study Center. Complete the test form (page 91), and return it with the $35 fee to: Optometric CE, P.O. Box 488, Canal Street Station,...