ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Tuesday, February 20, 1996             TAG: 9602200075
SECTION: VIRGINIA                 PAGE: C-4  EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: LISE OLSEN STAFF WRITER    
   RICHMOND


OPTOMETRISTS WIN RIGHT TO ADD SERVICES

EYE SPECIALISTS have been lobbying to be allowed to expand their duties. Their efforts have paid off as legislation was easily passed in the General Assembly.

Optometrists vs. ophthalmologists. Nurse anesthetists vs. anesthesiologists. Specialists whose titles many folk can't even pronounce have spawned endless medical turf battles in Virginia - struggles over patients' dollars and authorization to practice that often end up in the Virginia General Assembly.

Optometrists - eye doctors who do not go to medical school, as opposed to ophthalmologists who do - won a fight Monday to expand the scope of their practices to include dispensing more types of medication, and providing additional treatment.

Both the House of Delegates and the Senate passed similar bills that allow optometrists with special training to offer patients more services, instead of referring them to others.

The two similar versions of the bill passed both houses with hefty majorities Monday, and are almost assured of becoming law.

It's the kind of technical medical battle that troubles Sen. Mark Earley, R-Chesapeake, one of only four senators to oppose the change.

"It's not a good practice to have the General Assembly deciding these matters," Early said. "We don't have a real expertise in medicine or the practice of medicine."

But other lawmakers, including Del. William Barlow, D-Isle of Wight County, said optometrists made a convincing argument that consumers would benefit from the change, and that Virginia lagged behind other states in its regulations.

Ophthalmologists are still the only ones who can provide the most advanced kinds of care, such as laser surgery, under both bills.

But under the changes, an optometrist seeing a patient with an eye infection, for example, would be able to prescribe more kinds of medicine - instead of referring the patient to another doctor, which can add delay and expense to treatment. The bills also transfer oversight of optometrists to the Board of Optometry, instead of the Board of Medicine, which now sets many of the rules.

As many as half of all optometrists in the state were involved in an intense lobbying effort to change the laws, which were among the most restrictive in the country, according to Bruce Keeney, executive director of the Virginia Optometric Association. A team of 20 optometrists provided material and training to practitioners in their region, who personally visited legislators and lobbied for the change.

That effort - along with more than $100,000 in campaign contributions to legislators - helped inspire more than 70 lawmakers to co-sponsor the bills and ensured easy passage in both houses.


LENGTH: Medium:   58 lines
KEYWORDS: GENERAL ASSEMBLY 1996 






by CNB