"Moisturizers are important for the skin around the eyes, which contains no oil glands. Ms. Cryer uses two eye creams, a day cream that offers sun protection and a night cream without the "extra chemicals" of sunscreen. In the winter, Ms. Cryer even applies a little extra eye cream in midafternoon to "refresh" the skin. She sticks to "opthalmologist-tested" moisturizers that won't irritate the eyes themselves."
Today's Wall Street Journal, article by Cheryl Lu-Lien
Now that ophthalmologist Rand Paul is heading for the Senate, maybe reporters will start getting this one right.
"Dr. Paul completed a general surgery internship at Georgia Baptist Medical Center in Atlanta and completed his residency in ophthalmology at Duke University Medical Center. Upon completion of his training in 1993, Dr. Paul moved to Bowling Green, Ken., and began his ophthalmology practice.
In 1995, Dr. Paul founded the Southern Kentucky Lions Eye Clinic, an organization that provides eye exams and surgery to needy families and individuals. He has also provided free eye surgery to children from around the world through the Children of the Americas Program." Becker's ASC Review.
Showing posts with label ophthalmologist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ophthalmologist. Show all posts
Thursday, November 04, 2010
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Ophthalmologist
On October 17 I notified the CMS that it had misspelled ophthalmologist on the web page about glaucoma. No one replied, and it hasn't been corrected as of today (October 27, 2010). I guess they are too busy planning the next Obamacare bill.
https://www.cms.gov/GlaucomaScreening/
https://www.cms.gov/GlaucomaScreening/
Labels:
CMS,
ophthalmologist,
spelling
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Odd things our government does
Did you know that African Americans are at a higher risk for glaucoma than whites, Asians or Hispanics? And did you know the government includes them in Medicare for glaucoma screening at age 50, but not the rest of us, even though anyone can get glaucoma, and in numbers, more whites are affected than blacks? Oh well. I was listening to a public service announcement on the radio this morning and almost couldn't believe my ears. So I looked it up--several times.
Also on the page where I was reading about this, ophthalmologist was misspelled. So I searched through the documents until I found a contact link--almost everything was phone numbers, even though I was using the web--until I finally found something, so I wrote:
Also on the page where I was reading about this, ophthalmologist was misspelled. So I searched through the documents until I found a contact link--almost everything was phone numbers, even though I was using the web--until I finally found something, so I wrote:
- You have misspelled ophthalmologist at a page on glaucoma screening
https://www.cms.gov/GlaucomaScreening/
The phth only appears in a few words in English, but on a government web site, it should be spelled correctly.
Labels:
glaucoma screening,
Medicare,
ophthalmologist,
spelling
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