wife is young , only 54
but has had bad eyesight for a long while,
first 2 docs told here she had cataracts, but would not do anything until she got worse, unless she wanted to pay,
$8K an eye,, insurance would not cover unless the doc said it was needed,
we traveled to see her mom's doc, who did a great job with her mom's cataracts, and he said they were bad enough for insurance to cover,
still has to pay for some , depending on what lens she decides to get
but has had bad eyesight for a long while,
first 2 docs told here she had cataracts, but would not do anything until she got worse, unless she wanted to pay,
$8K an eye,, insurance would not cover unless the doc said it was needed,
we traveled to see her mom's doc, who did a great job with her mom's cataracts, and he said they were bad enough for insurance to cover,
still has to pay for some , depending on what lens she decides to get


" LOL because you have to be able to focus on the little light over your head for the doc to work. There is no knife as such. The surgeon makes a small punch incision at the edge of the cornea, pulverizes and extracts the old lens with a tool, inserts the new lens (which is rolled up) through the incision, unrolls it and you're done. I didn't feel a darn thing, zero pain or discomfort. Eye drops are necessary for a week or so but that's it. While I don't have the superior vision I did in my 20s its still pretty darn good.
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