Cataracts: What to Know About the Causes & Treatments
Grace Weatherby
/ Categories: WELLNESS, 2024

Cataracts: What to Know About the Causes & Treatments

Cataract is the leading cause of blindness worldwide. Closer to home, there are currently more than 24 million Americans age 40 and older who have cataracts and more than half of all Americans age 80 or older either have visually significant cataracts or have had surgery to remove cataracts. 

A cataract is a clouding of the lens inside the eye, which blocks or changes the passage of light into the eye. Cataracts are part of the normal aging process but once they interfere with the clarity of your vision on a day-to-day basis, you can consider having cataract surgery to remove them.    

While a cataract generally does not cause pain, redness or tearing, it can impact your vision. Signs of cataract include:

  • Blurred vision, double vision in one eye, ghost images, or the sense of a film over the eyes
  • Difficulty seeing at night
  • Seeing a halo around lights
  • Normal lighting, the sun, and headlights seem too bright
  • Needing to change your eyeglass or contact lens prescriptions often
  • A milky or white spot in the normally black pupil of your eye

While age certainly plays a part in the development of cataracts there are other risk factors, such as:

  • Intense heat or long-term exposure to UV rays from the sun
  • Certain diseases, such as diabetes
  • Inflammation in the eye
  • Family history of cataracts
  • Events before birth, such as German measles in the mother
  • Taking steroids
  • Eye injuries
  • Eye diseases
  • Smoking

While cataracts cannot be prevented entirely, you can help delay their onset and progression with healthy lifestyle choices, including: 

  • Wearing protective eyewear to shield eyes from UV rays
  • Quitting smoking and avoiding secondhand smoke
  • Maintaining a balanced diet rich in antioxidants like vitamin C
  • Managing underlying medical conditions like diabetes
  • Wearing protective eyewear while using power tools or playing certain sports to protect your eyes from injury
  • Scheduling regular comprehensive eye exams, especially after age 40

If there is good news to be had about cataracts, it is this: unlike many eye diseases, vision loss due to cataracts can be restored. Cataracts can be fixed with surgery and, for many patients, they can become less dependent on glasses after cataract surgery is done.

Cataract surgery is one of the most common surgical procedures in the U.S.—approximately 3.5 million performed last year alone—with a 95 percent success rate and short recovery time. As an added bonus, a new study found that cataract surgery patients had a significantly reduced rate of hip fractures from falls.

As noted, regular eye exams are key to spotting cataracts. If found in the early stages, surgery may not be immediately necessary. You may be able to get by with a change to your prescription, using anti-glare glasses to drive, and amping up the wattage of the lighting in your home. However, if your vision is impaired to a degree that impacts your daily living and safety, make an appointment to talk to your eye doctor about surgery. If you’re concerned about the cost of potential surgery, you’ll be happy to learn that while Medicare doesn’t cover routine vision care, it does cover the diagnosis and treatment of cataracts, including cataract surgery.  

 

Erik Niemi, DO, is an ophthalmology specialist at Advanced Eyecare in Bennington, VT.

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SVMC Creates Virtual Waiting Room to Encourage Distancing

BENNINGTON, VT—May 29, 2020—Starting Monday, many people who need in-person appointments at Southwestern Vermont Health Care's (SVHC) hospital and clinics will no longer need to use traditional waiting rooms. A virtual system created by the hospital allows patients to call 802-447-5000 when they arrive in the parking lot and receive a text message when their provider is ready to see them.

SVMC's outpatient and inpatient surgeries and diagnostic services, like those for imaging and laboratory work, have resumed with enhanced safety protocols per the directive of Governor Phil Scott. The health system's emergency department, ExpressCare, emergency surgical services, and most of its primary and specialty practices remained open during the pandemic.

"SVHC has provided safe, high-quality care throughout the pandemic." Said Thomas A. Dee, FACHE, Southwestern Vermont Health Care’s (SVHC) president and CEO. "Innovation has been an important part of providing care during these extraordinary times and this new program decreases the number of people in our waiting rooms and allows them to stay the recommended 6 feet apart or more."

In order to use the virtual waiting room, patients must be able to wait in their vehicle and have a charged cell phone with them. They will receive the virtual waiting room telephone number during their appointment-reminder telephone call. Signs outside the building and at the respiratory check-in stations inside the main hospital and medical office building entrances will also include the number to call.

Patients simply call the number when they arrive in the parking lot and wait in their cars. When the provider is ready to see them, they will receive a text message alert to indicate that they should come in.

"We love that we can use the same technology that most people carry with them to help people stay socially distanced," said Gail Balch, RN, who directs information technology at SVMC. "It's through innovations like this one that we are able to resume services safely and ensure patients receive the care they need."

Hospital and clinic staff anticipate that the new program will allow greater distance between people who must use traditional waiting rooms, including those who walked or took public transportation to their appointment and those who do not have a cell phone.

Additional safety protocols indicate that all patients should arrive to the hospital or clinic with their own cloth face covering. Face coverings must be worn over the mouth and nose for the entire duration of patients' visits. Patients should also come alone, unless they absolutely need assistance from a loved one.

For questions about how to resume or initiate elective care, call your primary care provider or the specialist directly. For a list of providers, visit svhealthcare.org/physician-directory.

Patients with cough or shortness of breath or any two of the following—fever, chills, muscle pain, headache, sore throat, or new loss of taste or smell—should contact their primary care provider or the COVID-19 Informational Hotline at 802-440-8844 before arriving to either their provider’s office or the hospital. For a detailed list of safety protocols, frequently asked questions, visitor guidelines, and COVID-19 information, visit svhealthcare.org.

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