By Michelle Andrews
MAY 15, 2018
Every
day, a school bus drops off as many as 45 children at a community eye clinic on
Chicago’s South Side. Many of them are referred to the clinic after failing
vision screenings at their public schools.
Clinicians
and students from the Illinois College of Optometry give the children comprehensive eye exams, which feature
refraction tests to determine a correct prescription for eyeglasses and
dilation of their pupils to examine their eyes, including the optic nerve and
retina.
No
family pays out-of-pocket for the exam. The program bills insurance if the
children have coverage, but about a third are uninsured. Operated in
partnership with Chicago public schools, the program annually serves up to 7,000
children from birth through high school.
“Many
of the kids we’re serving fall through the cracks,” said Dr. Sandra Block, a
professor of optometry at the Illinois College of Optometry and medical
director of the school-based vision clinics program. Many are low-income
Hispanic and African-American children whose parents may not speak English or
are immigrants who are not in the country legally.
Falling
through the cracks is not an uncommon problem when it comes to vision care.
According to a 2016 report from
the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, as many as 16
million people in the United States have undiagnosed or uncorrected
“refractive” errors that could be fixed with eyeglasses, contact lenses or
surgery. And while insurance coverage for eye exams and corrective lenses
clearly has improved, significant gaps remain.
The
national academies’ report noted that impaired vision affects how people
experience their world, including normal communication and social activities,
independence and mobility. Not seeing clearly can hamper children’s academic
achievement, social development and long-term health.
But
when people must choose, vision care may lose out to more pressing medical
concerns, said Block, who was on the committee that developed the report.
“Vision
issues are not life-threatening,” she said. “People get through their day
knowing they can’t see as well as they’d like.”
Insurance
can make regular eye exams, glasses and treatment for medical problems such as
cataracts more accessible and affordable. But comprehensive vision coverage is
often achieved only through a patchwork of plans.
The
Medicare program that provides coverage for millions of Americans age 65 and
older doesn’t include routine
eye exams, refraction testing or eyeglasses. Some tests are covered if you’re
at high risk for a condition such as glaucoma, for example. And if you develop
a vision-related medical condition such as cataracts, the program will cover
your medical care.
But if
you’re just a normal 70-year-old and you want to get your eyes examined, the
program won’t cover it, said Dr. David Glasser, an ophthalmologist in Columbia,
Md., who is a clinical spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmology. If
you make an appointment because you’re experiencing troubling symptoms and get
measured for eyeglasses while there, you’ll likely be charged anywhere from
about $30 to $75, Glasser said.
There
are a few exceptions. Medicare will pay for one pair of glasses or contact
lenses following cataract surgery, for example. Some Medicare Advantage plans
offer vision care.
Many
commercial health insurance plans also exclude routine vision care from their
coverage. Employers may offer workers a separate vision plan to fill in the
gaps.
VSP
Vision Care provides vision care plans to 60,000 employers and other clients,
said Kate Renwick-Espinosa, the organization’s president. A typical plan
provides coverage for a comprehensive eye exam once a year and an allowance
toward standard eyeglasses or contact lenses, sometimes with a copayment. Also,
individuals seeking plans make up a growing part of their business, she said.
Vision
coverage for kids improved under the Affordable Care Act. The law requires most plans sold on the
individual and small-group market to offer vision benefits for children younger
than 19. That generally means that those plans cover a comprehensive eye exam,
including refraction, every year, as well as a pair of glasses or contact
lenses.
But
since pediatric eye exams aren’t considered preventive care that must be
covered without charging people anything out-of-pocket under the ACA, they’re
subject to copays and the deductible.
Medicaid
programs for low-income people also typically cover vision benefits for
children and sometimes for adults as well, said Dr. Christopher Quinn,
president of the American Optometric Association, a professional group.
But
coverage alone isn’t enough. To bring down the number of people with
undiagnosed or uncorrected vision, education is key to helping people
understand the importance of eye health in maintaining good vision. Just as
important, it can also reduce the impact of chronic conditions such as
diabetes, the national academies’ report found.
“All
health care providers need to at least ask vision questions when providing
primary care,” said Block.
KHN’s
coverage of children’s health care issues is supported in part by the Heising-Simons Foundation.
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