Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Optometry bill fails

- ANDY DAVIS

A bill that would have allowed optometris­ts to perform certain kinds of surgeries failed to clear a legislativ­e committee on Tuesday.

Rep. Jon Eubanks, R-Paris, the sponsor of House Bill 1251, told the House Committee on Public Health, Welfare and Labor that the bill is designed to allow optometris­ts to give injections, remove benign lesions and perform certain types of laser surgeries.

He and the bill’s other supporters said it would allow optometris­ts to use more of the training they receive while reducing the distance patients must drive for such procedures.

Opponents of the bill, including representa­tives of the Arkansas Medical Society and Arkansas Ophthalmol­ogical Society, said it would put patients at risk by allowing optometris­ts to perform procedures currently performed by ophthalmol­ogists.

Optometris­ts complete a four-year program on eye care after graduating from college and are licensed by the Arkansas Board of Optometry.

Ophthalmol­ogists, who are physicians licensed by the state Medical Board, are medical school graduates who complete a yearlong hospital internship and at least three years of residency.

“A 32-hour workshop does not make you a surgeon,” said Monica Hall, a Little Rock ophthalmol­ogist. “They’re asking to use needles, knives, scalpels and lasers.”

Arkansas law currently allows optometris­ts to remove foreign objects from the surface of the eye, but bars them from performing other surgical procedures.

Oklahoma, Kentucky and Louisiana allow optometris­ts to perform certain surgeries, and Alaska is developing regulation­s for it, Eubanks said.

Fourteen other states allow optometris­ts to perform injections, remove lesions, or both, he said.

“I don’t think there’s any evidence out there that the optometris­ts are not being able to perform these procedures in a safe, profession­al manner,” Eubanks said.

The bill fell two votes short of the 11 it needed to clear the 20-member committee. Ten members voted against it and the chairman, Rep. Jack Ladyman, R-Jonesboro, didn’t vote.

Eubanks said after the meeting that he hadn’t decided whether to present the bill to the committee again.

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. ?? Ophthalmol­ogist Dr. Monica Hall (seated) voices her opposition Tuesday to House Bill 1251 that would allow optometris­ts to perform certain types of surgery. The House Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee voted down the proposal.
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/JOHN SYKES JR. Ophthalmol­ogist Dr. Monica Hall (seated) voices her opposition Tuesday to House Bill 1251 that would allow optometris­ts to perform certain types of surgery. The House Public Health, Welfare and Labor Committee voted down the proposal.

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