Is a Doctor or Eye Care Practitioner required by law to release my contact lens prescription?
The law varies from place to place, but in most areas the practitioner is required to release your prescription once the fitting is complete. Your practitioner is not required to release an expired prescription. Some practitioners are more willing than others to give your prescription to you. Your prescription is also found on the box in which your contact lenses were supplied. 7. Can I use bifocal lenses for far (distant) and near (reading) vision? Presbyopia develops in later life and means that the eye cannot focus properly on objects close-up. This makes it difficult for middle-aged people to read easily without wearing spectacles. A good new development is the bifocal soft contact lens. It allows the wearer to focus on both distant and close-up objects. Such lenses have been much more expensive in the past but recently Johnson and Johnson has released their new Acuvue Bifocal lens which is a disposable bifocal lens that is reasonably priced and becoming very popular. 8. Can colore
Related Questions
- Can an optometrist release my contact lens prescription if I had an eye examination for contact lenses but haven’t completed the fitting process?
- Is an Eye Care Practitioner required by law to release my contact lenses prescription?
- Is eye care practitioner required by law to release my contact lens prescription?