Voice of the Diabetic
Voice of the Diabetic
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MEDICARE NOW COVERS GLAUCOMA-DETECTION EYE EXAM
Medicare now covers an annual dilated eye examination for all people considered
"at high risk for glaucoma." This coverage began January 1, 2002.
Glaucoma, a leading cause of blindness, affects about three million Americans—half
of whom don't know they have the condition.
The new benefit defines "High-Risk" Medicare beneficiaries
as those with diabetes, those with a family history of glaucoma, and people
of African-American ethnicity aged 50 or older. Glaucoma is five times more
likely to occur in African-Americans than in whites, and about four times more
likely to cause blindness in African Americans than in whites, according to
the National Eye Institute.
"Preventive benefits, such as this new glaucoma coverage,
help keep people enrolled in Medicare healthy, and improve their quality of
life," said Secretary of Health and Human Services Tommy Thompson. "An
eye exam now can prevent serious problems later, even blindness. It is important
that we make taking care of our eyes part of our overall health maintenance
program."
"Glaucoma, and the risk of vision loss, remains unrecognized
for millions of Americans," says Paul A Sieving, MD, PhD, director of the
National Eye Institute. "The expanded Medicare coverage will help people
keep their vision, especially those at high risk for eye disease. Once vision
is lost from glaucoma, it cannot be restored—the damage is irreversible.
Studies have shown that early detection and treatment of glaucoma, before it
causes major vision loss, is the best way to control the disease."
The "air puff" test, which measures the internal fluid
pressure in the eye, is one part of a glaucoma examination, but the test cannot
by itself detect glaucoma. Glaucoma is detected most often (as are other serious
eye conditions like diabetic retinopathy) by eye examination through dilated
pupils—in which drops of medicine are put into the eyes to temporarily
enlarge the pupils, allowing the eye care professional a better look at the
inside of the eye.
For more information, contact: Glaucoma, 2020 Vision Place,
Bethesda, MD 20892-3655; web site: www.nei.nih.gov
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