See Clearly with Community Colleges' Free Eye Care Clinics

See Clearly with Community Colleges' Free Eye Care Clinics
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Free eye care is only one community college visit away. Learn about community college programs around the country that offer free eye care to local residents.
Health insurance is notoriously expensive in the United States, and as Americans struggle to maintain their basic health insurance coverage, many have eliminated their vision and dental insurance policies.  However, proper eye care is an essential part of overall health. A person who does not have the proper eyeglasses can suffer from a severely compromised quality of life.
 
Fortunately, a number of community colleges with optometry training programs are beginning to offer free clinics, which provide training for community college students and free or low-cost services to local residents in need.
 
Free Services Benefit Local Residents on a Budget
 
Ophthalmic technician Joy Fountain, who organizes a Community Eyecare Day along with Michigan eye care chain Advanced Eyecare Professionals, tells the Grand Rapids Press that seeing people in need who are helped by the free clinic days makes all the planning and extra effort worth it. She tells the story of one woman who came to the clinic wearing her son’s taped-together glasses, despite the fact that her son’s glasses were for a nearsighted person while the woman herself was farsighted.
 
Another woman, whose free exam revealed that she had glaucoma and who was able to receive corrective laser surgery from the clinic, tells the Grand Rapids Press that if it weren’t for the volunteers at the Community Eyecare Day, “I wouldn’t have glasses, and I probably would have lost my eyesight.”
 
The American Optometric Associations says that regular vision exams are an essential part of preventative health care. Because, as the AOA notes, “many eye and vision problems have no obvious signs or symptoms,” people who do not get their vision checked regularly may be unaware that a problem is developing, and thus may miss the opportunity to treat problems early before irreparable damage and possible vision loss occurs.
 
According to WebMD, adults with vision problems such as nearsightedness or farsightedness should get eye exams every two years before the age of 50 and every year after the age of 50.  The American Diabetic Association recommends a yearly eye exam for people with diabetes, whether or not they have diagnosed vision problems.
 
Working in Free Clinics Helps Community College Students Too
 
While local residents can benefit from the free clinics, these eye care clinics also provide students with excellent training opportunities. 
 
Students Gain Hands-On Experience

Connecticut’s Hartford-Courant reports that Middlesex Community College’s Ophthalmic Design and Dispensing program recently held its annual Community Eyecare Day, wherein 40 residents from the surrounding community were able to get eye exams and new glasses that had been donated by local businesses.
 
Joyce Furman, a second-year student in the Ophthalmic Design and Dispensing program and one of the event’s co-coordinators, tells the Hartford-Courant that the community college students benefit from the opportunity to practice the skills they’re learning in their courses in a real-world setting. "Contact with the patients is the biggest thing,” she says. “It's the hands-on experience that we need.”
 
Chance to Give Back to the Community
 
Professor Rene "Skip" Rivard of Middlesex Community College’s OD&D department tells the Hartford-Courant that he sees the event as an important way to teach students about the value of using their skills and training to give back to their community. "This project provides an opportunity for our students to understand that being a health care provider is not strictly for pecuniary benefits," he says. “The students recognize the need to use their education to provide a service within their community.”
 
Helps Student Prepare for the Job Hunt
 
Volunteering in free clinics can also benefit community college students by giving them an edge over the competition when they finish their training and begin looking for a job. The Free Clinic of Southwest Washington, which depends on volunteers to provide a range of free health, vision, and dental services to local residents, notes that people who have received training in a medical profession may “find it difficult to break into the real job market without major experience.” Working at the free clinic helps students who have trained in the Opthalmic Tech program at the nearby Portland Community College gain the real-world experience that they need to find a real-world job.
 
Through community colleges, both residents and students are seeing clearly!

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