Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Anyone have recent experience of the price of a PanOptix lens?
 

I appreciate the surgeon and hospital costs will vary but I have been quoted between ฿36,000 and ฿92,000 for the PanOptix lens by different hospitals. This is the price for the lens only. 
 

Given the hospitals do not produce the lens and will purchase from a supplier I would expect the lens price to be similar at different hospitals. 
 

Based on my personal experience this is clearly not the case. 
 

Thanks for any feedback. 
 

 

Posted

Why would you expect the price to be the same? Different businesses have different costs and different markups. 

 

A can of pop that costs fifty-cents at 7/11 costs three dollars at a hotel. 

 

Posted
23 minutes ago, mahjongguy said:

Just this advice:  Do all the reading you can about patients who bought into the hype regarding multi-focus lenses.   

I was chatting to a pilot friend the other day who said pilots generally don't get lasik or new lenses, not worth the risk 

Posted
51 minutes ago, mahjongguy said:

Just this advice:  Do all the reading you can about patients who bought into the hype regarding multi-focus lenses.   

I looked into this once upon a time and found that not everyone was happy with the results.  In the end, I opted for the singe focus lens.  Needing reading glasses was no big deal for me. 

Posted
2 minutes ago, jas007 said:

I looked into this once upon a time and found that not everyone was happy with the results.  In the end, I opted for the singe focus lens.  Needing reading glasses was no big del for me. 

I thought they did one eye near and the other far, no?

Posted
6 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

I thought they did one eye near and the other far, no?

I think that's what they usually do. When I had my surgeries, they were spaced one month apart. Adjusting to the new lenses may actually take more time than that, so if you're having both eyes done and the surgeries are both completed before your eyes have had time to fully adjust, you might be sorry with the eventual results.   And it's not a cheap surgery for anyone who has to pay out of pocket, at least in the USA. 

Posted
8 minutes ago, jas007 said:

I think that's what they usually do. When I had my surgeries, they were spaced one month apart. Adjusting to the new lenses may actually take more time than that, so if you're having both eyes done and the surgeries are both completed before your eyes have had time to fully adjust, you might be sorry with the eventual results.   And it's not a cheap surgery for anyone who has to pay out of pocket, at least in the USA. 

Huh. I've thought about it, but my eyes are not that bad. I wear progressive/multi-focal lenses, but I think I could get along without glasses altogether but for reading. 

 

When I looked at it, I would have been cheaper in the US (Texas) than in Thailand. Texas is generally great for medical and dental not typically covered by insurance. 

Posted
9 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

When I looked at it, I would have been cheaper in the US (Texas) than in Thailand. Texas is generally great for medical and dental not typically covered by insurance. 

Medicare covered my surgeries, I believe, but they would only pay for the standard inserts.  I'm not sure how much extra, exactly, the progressive inserts would have cost, but I think it wasn't cheap and for me, not worth the risk   

 

I also have BCBS as a secondary payor, but I'm not sure how that would have worked out in terms of paying for the progressive lenses.  I didn't look into it that far.   

Posted
7 minutes ago, jas007 said:

Medicare covered my surgeries, I believe, but they would only pay for the standard inserts.  I'm not sure how much extra, exactly, the progressive inserts would have cost, but I think it wasn't cheap and for me, not worth the risk   

 

I also have BCBS as a secondary payor, but I'm not sure how that would have worked out in terms of paying for the progressive lenses.  I didn't look into it that far.   

I think for the PanOptix lenses it's about $6-8K an eye all in. 

 

I have Medicare, but I've never used it. 

 

Posted

There's a ton of information about choosing an IOL. I too read quite a lot, and decided that the best for me would be IOL for distance (mono), and spectacles for reading.

 

Multi focal IOL's may cause issues with night driving due to halos, it seems.

 

Make sure to do a lot of research and decide the best for you - if possible, speak with your Doctor and get his expert opinion/recommendation too.

 

 

 

  • Thumbs Up 1
Posted
11 minutes ago, Yellowtail said:

I think for the PanOptix lenses it's about $6-8K an eye all in. 

 

I have Medicare, but I've never used it. 

 

I think my eye surgeries are the only thing I ever used Medicare for. I usually don't get sick t all.

 

Anyway, the way Medicare works is that for providers who "accept assignment," Medicare pays the provider directly, and quickly, so the provider is assured of payment.  In return, the provider agrees to take the amount Medicare thinks the surgery is worth.  So, for example, the doctor's charges and the cost of the surgery center might be $30,000 per eye, and yet Medicare might only pay $10,000. The provider knows that but takes the money anyway and perhaps adjusts his fees higher so that other people not on Medicare end up paying more money.  

 

It's all a crazy game and all out of control. People without insurance have a problem.  

 

All I know is that between Medicare and BCBS, I've never paid a penny for any of my surgeries.  I paid some money in Bangkok for some testes they ran, and I could have filed a claim with BCBS, but for me the aggravation is not worth it.  

Posted
Just now, scubascuba3 said:

Good they do one eye at a time, every post I've read suggests people get both done here 

I've been looking into that for years and I do not think I have heard that. 

 

For lasik maybe

Posted
2 hours ago, mahjongguy said:

Just this advice:  Do all the reading you can about patients who bought into the hype regarding multi-focus lenses.   

 

I think this is sound advice.

 

My optometrist in UK said that simplest is best ie monofocal lens and just use reading glasses. Since no surgery has guaranteed results, he also said people who have it and understand that they may still need glasses for all distances post-surgery are less likely to be disappointed. This is a guy I've seen for 30+ years (and is well-respected within the London community of opthalmologists) so I trust his opinion.

 

Basically go for improved clarity of vision as the goal, not 20/20 acuity at all focal distances. There's a diopter range for the surgery outcome  (i.e. target 0.0 but may end up +0.5 or - 0.5 or whatever). For some people ending up slightly short-sighted works better than slightly long-sighted post surgery, particularly for near / intermediate vision. But ultimately all really depends on what is important to you / what you do in daily life.

 

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.


×
×
  • Create New...