Bill Harvey introduces the second in a series of interactive CET exercises based upon the recent series of articles by Dr Nizar Hirji concerning the legal requirements of eye care practitioners
In the second in our series developed and coordinated with Lynne Speedwell of Great Ormond Street Hospital, Reshma Pattani explains uveitis and how it can affect children
Dr Marian Elder and Assistant Professor Sruthi Srinivasan explain the use and significance of the technique of meibography
In the last of a three-part discussion of the key points from the recently published second TFOS Dry Eye Workshop, Sarah Farrant describes the recommendations for the management of dry eye disease
Concluding our series on diabetic retinopathy, Peter Mitchell discusses the management of sight threatening diabetes eye disease detected during the grading process based on the final outcome grade.
In another of his occasional updates on ocular diseases with systemic implications, Ceri Probert takes a look at the range of diseases of often very different nature which all have impact upon the posterior chamber. (C58478, one distance learning CET point, suitable for optometrists and therapeutic optometrists)
In the second of a two part look at the links between optometry and psychiatry, Dr Doina Gherghel describes how the treatment of psychiatric diseases can have ocular and visual impact.
Dr Douglas Clarkson looks at how developments in medical screening techniques are showing promise in the identification and monitoring of central nervous system degenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease
In the second in this two-part series on the optics of contact lenses, Ronald Rabbetts considers the optical influences on binocular viewing
Continuing her discussion of research into myopia control, Dr Kathy Dumbleton describes the design of clinical studies and how clinical research relating to myopia control is evaluated