“i wouldn’t have known i had these conditions,” she says. “but i was operated on successfully and i have this gift of sight. optometrists are the people who discover problems. i’m fighting for them.”
decades of underfunding
sheldon salaba, head of oao, says the job action — which has 2,300 of the 2,650 optometrists in ontario participating — that began september 1 is sparked by three decades of underfunding.
in 1989, the government funded $39.15 toward an eye exam and now, in 2021, it funds, on average, $44 toward an eye exam. in 32 years, that’s a little less than a $5 increase.
his group’s members are currently subsidizing around 45 per cent of the cost of every examination because funding has not kept pace with the realistic costs of running a clinic and the complexity of the services provided. since the increase in scope of practice in 2010, ontario optometrists have been prescribing medications and developing treatment plans to manage eye conditions.
“we are the family doctors of eyes,” salaba explains. “and it’s a complex organ to examine. it is frequented by many different types of eye diseases when people age, very common ones like macular degeneration and glaucoma, and diseases like adult-onset diabetes — things that people have no idea are developing or starting without having an eye exam.”