Politics

California Optometrists back in business with Medi-Cal

Posted in Politics on July 9th, 2010 by Thanh – 1 Comment

Beginning July 26 optometrists can see Medi-Cal patients once more.

Check it out here

AOA optometry’s meeting in Orlando, Discover the Possibilities, recap

Posted in Make yourself better, Management, Meeting people, Politics on June 26th, 2010 by Thanh – 2 Comments

My AOSA Trustee Dave sold me on going to optometry’s  meeting, so I went last week to the AOA optometry’s meeting in Orlando and boy was it an event. The Gaylord Hotel was enormous with multiple pools, bars, and a large convention center. There’s just something about a huge auditorium with two big screens showing the speaker and powerpoint presentation that is just cool in my opinion.

Highlights:

- Optometry super bowl (hosted by Essilor) . It was like a sporting event, people were chanting and screaming for 2 hours for their representative to show everyone who was the biggest nerd of all in a knowledge bowl optometry trivia match. Unfortunately, our guy Andy didn’t make it past the first round. Dr. Kevin Alexander, our president, was there and told us if we won the bowl he’d give the winner a full-ride scholarship – so I’m going to go for it next year!

- Went to a seminar by John Rumpakis, and A. Kabat about day to day dilemmas. It was similar to my case analysis classes and there were probably 500+ students in attendance.  Val and I were the only students to walk up to the presenter A. Kabat after the lecture to get his opinion on why he used Azasite for something in conjunction with oral doxycycline – though I forget what the condition was (ocular rosacea?).

- John Rumpakis and Ryan Parker had a presentation on private practice and the transition from student to doctor. They did something really ingenius to get participation by putting up their cell phone numbers for us to text questions and while the other person was talking they would read the text messages and answer the questions. They might have answered 20-30 in total and 2 of them were mine! I asked them who they thought would win, Lakers or Celtics, before the actual game and they were split. I also was confused at how Dr. Parker got his practice breaking even 2.5 months after starting cold without stealing patients from his former partner – he kind of shyly answered the question but Dr. Rumpakis called him on it and said he basically stole the patients lol. I guess in optometry, you gotta do what you gotta do.

- The receptions were a ton of fun. I met a bunch of other students from Berkeley to SUNY and thought everyone I met was super nice and easy to talk to. The future of the profession looks bright, I know this because nice people finish first in my opinion =).

- Practicing optometrists at the AOA convention love the profession and think it has a bright future. I kept hearing from the young and older docs “Congratulations! You joined a fantastic profession.” To be honest, it makes me feel great to hear such things.

- Some believe optometry  is oversaturated. “Get out of California, come to my neck of the woods.” Others (some of the hotshot consultants) think saturation is no big issue.

Optometry students, test-taking, and the self-serving bias

Posted in Academic, Clinical, Make yourself better, Politics on May 24th, 2010 by Thanh – Be the first to comment

In psychology there is something called the self-serving bias. To quote from Wikipedia:

“A self-serving bias occurs when people attribute their successes to internal or personal factors but attribute their failures to situational factors beyond their control.” (wikipedia)

Not my fault, the DOG ate my homework!

This is prevalent in optometry school and no doubt with many other professional/graduate  schools. When it comes to test-taking, it seems to happen on every other test that there is a question that students miss yet inevitably blame the instructor for writing a poor test question.

Students sometimes start to think they’re always right, and refuse to listen and learn when they’re wrong. At my friend’s work, she laments often about coworkers who EVERYONE knows is at fault for a particular problem, yet that coworker is too prideful to admit they made a mistake and the politics of the matter makes life difficult to get things done.

So what’s the point of this post? It’s really just to say “don’t take yourself so seriously.” At SCCO they try to teach confidence in the clinic, to make a decision and stick to your guns. This is the right approach, but while learning always remain open to accept criticism for your mistakes.

AOA provides more information regarding healthcare reform

Posted in Meeting people, Politics on April 2nd, 2010 by Thanh – Be the first to comment

http://www.aoa.org/documents/HCR-Outline.pdf

http://www.aoa.org/documents/faqs.pdf

If you’re confused as I am about healthcare reform and how it may affect optometry, the AOA provides some very useful information. Click on both of the links above to learn more!

Here is the AOA president’s blog as well. http://newsfromaoa.org/