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advertisement - Opticians Association of Canada
ENVOIS DE PUBLICATIONS CANADIENNES • NO. DE CONVENTION 40052210 Adresse de retour : 202-495 boul. St-Martin O, Laval (Québec) H7M 1Y9 0A_vis11_8 06/11/08 14:29 Page 1 | nov_dec | 2008 ADVERTISEMENT 0B_vis11_8 06/11/08 14:47 Page 1 ENVOIS DE PUBLICATIONS CANADIENNES • NO. DE CONVENTION 40052210 Adresse de retour : 202-495 boul. St-Martin O, Laval (Québec) H7M 1Y9 _vis11-8:8 13/11/08 15:42 Page 1 | nov_dec | 2008 02_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:56 Page 1 03_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 11:15 Page 1 13/11/08 15:56 Page 4 | CONTENT | nov_dec | 2008 _vis11-8:8 | 08 | Full-Time or Part-Time, Contact Lenses are the New Essentials | 18 | Light Isn’t Always Right | 22 | KIO Yamato: Timeless Elegance, Art and Culture | 24 | Vision Screening for Children a Big Success | 30 | Competing on Contacts Still Possible | 34 | Audacious and Artistic: Christian Roth and Eric Domege | 36 | Economic Crisis May Spell Opportunity | 40 | Issues and News from | 42 | | 44 | | 46 | Today is a Good Day Optician Profile: Sara Moshurchak What’s new? | 48 | Classified Ads | NEXT ISSUE | jan_feb | 2009 your Association China: Threat or Opportunity? China is a leading exporter of frames to the world and has the world’s largest ‘bespectacled’ population. This article will examine the impact of China on the worldwide optical industry, asking and answering questions about current business opportunities, the quality of goods, international trade issues, and the overall state and size of the Chinese market. PRODUCED FOR THE OPTICIANS ASSOCIATION OF CANADA BY: Breton Communications Inc. 495 St-Martin Blvd. West, #202 Laval, Québec H7M 1Y9 Tel. : (450) 629-6005 Fax : (450) 629-6044 [email protected] www.bretoncom.com 4 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 PRESIDENT/PUBLISHER Martine Breton [email protected] ADVERTISING COORDINATOR / COPY EDITOR Lauren Saroukhan [email protected] EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Paddy Kamen Tel. : (250) 448-7516 [email protected] ART DIRECTION Marco Gagnon.com ASSOCIATE EDITORS James W. Ahola, B.A.Sc. Shannon Falconer Mary Field JoAnne Sommers COPY EDITOR / RESEARCHER Isabelle Groulx [email protected] ADVERTISING Martine Breton [email protected] Isabelle Groulx [email protected] 1-888-462-2112 Tel. : (450) 629-6005 Fax : (450) 629-6044 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING [email protected] PRINTING K2 impressions Inc. | The Opticians Association of Canada | Published six times a year For subscription information, contact the Opticians Association of Canada Legal deposit National Library of Canada ISSN 1194-224X Canadian Publication Mail Product Convention NO 40052210 Postage Paid in Quebec All reproduction, in all or in part, of the herein publication, is strictly forbidden, without the written authorization of the publisher. Printed in Canada 05_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:52 Page 1 12/11/08 15:13 Page 6 | EDITORIAL | _vis11-8:8 Paddy Kamen Editor-in-chief | Welcome to our end-of-year issue and our annual feature on contact lenses – a subject not without its controversies. Not all opticians chose to fit contacts. According to Janice Schmidt and Tony Vianni, both coordinators of opticianry programs (Janice in Ontario and Tony in B.C.) this is a mistake and a shame. Janice Schmidt finds fitting contact lenses even more rewarding that helping a person find eyeglasses. “I especially enjoy fitting the ‘difficult’ client, including children and people with therapeutic needs. And the major benefit, especially for people with high myopia, is the improved visual acuity they obtain with contacts.” It is essential that ECPs recommend the best product for visual performance, says Schmidt. “What consumers want is improved vision and great service, and the way to differentiate oneself is to make available a variety of optical appliances to serve the many needs people have, whether that be low vision aids, eyeglasses, vocational glasses or contact lenses.” Vianni agrees. “An optician should provide both eyeglasses and contact lenses. Fitting contacts is part of our scope of practice and you can’t fully help your patient if you’re just an eyeglass dispenser. If a person comes in who needs your help and advice about contacts you should be able to provide that help then and there.” The dramatic improvements in contact lens materials and designs have passed many people by, notes Vianni. “It’s up to opticians to appropriately assess the situation and help them determine if contact lenses will fit their lifestyle. In my experience there are very few people who cannot benefit from them at least on a part-time basis.” The subject of Internet sales raises the hackles of most ECPs, and rightly so. Janice Schmidt tells the story of fitting a nurse in her community who subsequently purchased contact lenses off the Internet. “I gave her heck and she realized her mistake and came back. It overwhelms me that people take their eye health so lightly, and especially a nurse!” Mary Field covers the topic of Internet sales in another article in this issue. You’ll also find a story on the effect of artificial light on insomnia, profile of a young optician, and much more including a touching article by James Ahola on not letting life’s precious moments pass us by. Thank you for spending some of your precious moments with us. IS I 6 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | 07_vis09-8:8 11/09/08 10:59 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 8 13/11/08 15:43 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 Page 8 | The Opticians Association of Canada | _vis11-8:8 13/11/08 15:43 Page 9 By Paddy Kamen | Almost everyone can wear today’s contact lenses, and according to Tony Vianni, coordinator of the opticianry program at Douglas College in B.C., almost everyone should have a pair. “There’s only a small percentage of the population that wouldn’t benefit from contact lenses in their daily lives. Of course, each person should also have a pair of eyeglasses but there are many activities where contact lenses are the best choice, including running, working out or other sports. Most people will benefit from wearing contacts either part-time during specific activities or full-time, with eyeglasses as a back up.” Janice Schmidt agrees. “People are much more physically and socially active today, and contact lenses work well for almost every sport,” says the coordinator of the opticianry program at Georgian College in Barrie, Ontario. “But more importantly, it’s about choice and people want to have choices. For opticians it’s about providing customers with appliances that serve both their vocational and avocational needs. One of those choices should be contact lenses.” But are there economic opportunities for ECPs when it comes to selling contact lenses? Certainly the market has changed | The Opticians Association of Canada | VISION | sep_oct | 2008 9 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:14 Page 10 The Opticians Association of Canada Association des opticiens du Canada 2706-83 Garry Street Winnipeg, Manitoba R3C 4J9 (204) 982-6060 • 1-(800) 847-3155 E-mail : [email protected] Web site : www.opticians.ca 2008 PROVINCIAL DIRECTORS | ADMINISTRATEURS PROVINCIAUX LORNE KASHIN President | Président Thornhill, Ontario (905) 881-1276 Alberta DAVID MCGOWAN Red Deer • (403) 347-1020 British Columbia | Colombie-Britannique CINDY KOSZEGI Abbotsford • 1-866-920-5911 Manitoba TODD SMITH Secretary Treasurer | Secrétaire-trésorier Winnipeg • (204) 788-4571 New Brunswick | Nouveau-Brunswick ROBERTA MCLAUGHLIN Saint John • (506) 634-0016 Newfoundland | Terre-Neuve MARIAN WALSH St. John’s • (709) 579-2605 Nova Scotia | Nouvelle-Écosse ROBERT DALTON Vice-President | Vice-président Halifax • (902) 455-4305 Ontario LORNE KASHIN President | Président Thornhill • (905) 881-1276 Prince Edward Island | Île-du-Prince-Édouard DALIE SCHELLEN Charlottetown • (902) 566-2020 dramatically in the last ten years, and even though sales of contact lenses are slightly up, according to both Schmidt and Vianni, wearers are not necessarily buying their contacts from professionals. “Nevertheless there is money to be made from contact lenses, and a true optician will dispense according to what people need,” says Vianni. “Through conversation, the optician uncovers important information about the person’s work life, hobbies and other activities. It’s up to the optician to do a thorough assessment before making recommendations. Many customers may wrongly think they cannot use contacts, or they may have seen advertisements but not made the connection to their own needs.” Vianni also believes it is essential that ECPs demonstrate the value of their examination services by explaining the process to patients. “Opticians do a great job in making the examination look easy and the patient may perceive that nothing of significance is being done. So let the patient know what you are doing when you are doing it. You can for example tell the patient, ‘I am checking under your lids to see if there are any problems’, or ‘I am checking the integrity of the cornea and the tear level’. You may be able to do the job faster but if you’re not explaining to the patient you’re not really doing your job. And by thoroughly explaining the risks associated with contacts and the need for regular examinations, you’re strengthening the perception of value and the likelihood that the patient will come back to you for future purchases rather than buying on the Internet.” Schmidt believes that while eyeglasses are the largest profit center in this market, the provision of contact lenses is a service that proves the ECP is competent to provide total eye care. “This is especially true if you work in a smaller city or town. People want to purchase locally and I would hope the local ECP would provide everything people need.” Quebec | Québec ROBERT GRIMARD Vision Canada General Manager | Directeur général de Vision Canada 1-866-377-3636 Saskatchewan JAMES HOLSTEIN Rosetown • (306) 882-3511 10 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | The new contact lens materials and designs give practitioners an opportunity to upgrade patients and keep them in contact lenses longer, notes Schmidt, who also speaks highly of improved multifocal designs. “The success rate is much higher than it used to be. And while they don’t work the same as eyeglass lenses and aren’t a replacement for them, multifocal contact lenses are much more accurate and great for playing sports or socializing.” With winter upon us, contact lenses with UV protection can help shield eyes from harsh winter glare. Exposure to UV rays during winter can temporarily harm the eyes as well as increase the risk of developing sunlight-related eye disorders, including cataracts, a leading cause of reduced vision. Ultraviolet radiation reaches the eye via reflection from ground surfaces. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), while UV radiation is generally lower during winter months, snow reflection may double an individual's overall exposure. The WHO advises that fresh snow may reflect as much as 80 pe rcent of UV rays, compared to other surfaces such as grass, soil and water, which reflect less than 10 per cent of UV radiation; dry beach sand (about 15 per cent), and sea foam (about 25 per cent). Not all contact lenses offer UV protection, and, of those that do, not all provide similar absorption levels. According to Vistakon, only ACUVUE® ADVANCETM, ACUVUE® ADVANCETM for ASTIGMATISM, and ACUVUE® OASYS™ contact lens brands carry the Seal of Acceptance for Ultraviolet Absorbing Contact Lenses from the American Optometric Association's Commission on Ophthalmic Standards. The lenses offer the highest level of UV blocking available, blocking more than 90 per cent of UVA rays and 99 per cent of UVB rays that reach the lens. On average, contact lenses without UV blocking stop approximately 10 per cent of UVA radiation and 30 per cent of UVB radiation. 11_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:47 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:16 Page 12 FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME, Contact Lenses are the New Essentials Vistakon spokesperson Brian Linde, a Montana-based optometrist and past president of the Montana Optometric Association, says that sunglasses with UV protective lenses only block about 50 per cent of UV radiation, because sunlight also enters the eye from above, below and around the sunwear. "The greatest measure of UV protection can be achieved with a combination of UV-absorbing sunglasses, UV-blocking contact lenses and a wide brimmed hat," he advises. easy-to-open blister pack. With these lenses, Bausch & Lomb bring a breakthrough design to market that continues to build on their expert knowledge of aspherics, along with their Comfort Moist Technology that allows for the slow release of a solution which envelops the lens in cushion of moisture, helping to deliver comfort until the end of the day. Now available in sphere powers of +6.50D to –9.00D, this lens is an excellent option for patient compliance and convenience. For contact lens care, Bausch & Lomb’s new improved VisionPaks are aimed at influencing patient compliance. “We know that ECPs are concerned that patients are risking infection by not following instructions,” says Patrick Leu, brand manager, lens care. “So we’ve put large, clear and simple visual messages about lens care on the packaging. We also added a second lens case because it is important for the patient to change lens cases on a regular basis. With two bottles and two cases, it becomes natural to change cases when changing bottles. We’ve also included a sample of lubricant because many patients experience dry eyes at the end of the day.” CooperVision overcomes the compromises that have been associated with many silicone hydrogel lenses with their Biofinity monthly, approved for 29 nights of wear. Marketing manager, Chirag Patel points at the AQUAFORM patented technology that surrounds the siloxane chains, giving the material water-loving properties. “It creates charged areas within the material that forms hydrogen bonds with the water molecules, locking the water into the lens material. Biofinity retains water, minimizing dehydration and thereby increasing comfort and deposit resistance.” Leu adds that Bausch & Lomb’s research shows that ReNu works well even when patients are non-compliant. “So we hope ECPs will recommend it for any patients they have concerns about.” VisionPaks will be marketed exclusively through ECPs. They include two large format 480 ml bottles of ReNu MultiPlus® or Sensitive Eyes® Multi-Purpose Solution, a Healthy Lens Care Guide, two lens cases, and one bottle of ReNu Rewetting Drops. There is also a new ReNu in a travel size 60 ml bottle, with a bright orange airplane logo on the bottle, which offers an easy impulse sale for the office or store. Also look for SofLens Daily disposable lenses from Bausch & Lomb, specially designed for ease of use in an 12 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | With high Dk and higher water content, lower modulus and lower wetting angle, Biofinity is a CooperVision success story for contact lens wearers. Due to the growing need for cataract surgery for the aging population, IOL lenses are increasingly in demand. The AcrySof® ReSTOR® Aspheric Intraocular Lens (IOL) from Alcon is a unique technological innovation that can provide quality vision throughout the entire visual spectrum – near through distance – with reduced dependence on reading glasses or bifocals. 71_vis09-8:8 04/09/08 09:12 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:17 Page 14 FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME, Contact Lenses are the New Essentials “The arrival on the market of a presbyopia-correcting lens implant means that cataract patients can regain visual quality that has been lost over time, as well as increase their independence from glasses, which was impossible with conventional implants,” said Dr. Darren Albert, Assistant Professor of Ophthalmology at McGill University in Montréal. “The satisfaction rate among patients with ReSTOR Aspheric is over 95 per cent and the personal accounts of patients are revealing. This type of implant can suit all patients, provided there is not too much astigmatism or other eye-related diseases.” In an FDA clinical study, 80 per cent of patients receiving the AcrySof ReSTOR IOL reported that they never wear glasses for any activities. With the AcrySof ReSTOR IOL, they can read, work on computers, drive – day or night – and play golf or tennis with an increased freedom from glasses. In fact, patients were so pleased with their vision, nearly 94 per cent said they would have the AcrySof ReSTOR IOL implanted again, if given the choice. For patients suffering from dry eye or dryness following LASIK surgery, Allergan has expanded its OPTIVE™ brand line with the addition of OPTIVE™ Sensitive Preservative-Free Lubricant Eye Drops, an over-the-counter (OTC) artificial tear. OPTIVE is Allergan’s line of artificial tears with a unique dual action formula that works on both, the ocular surface and the cellular level, to provide long-lasting relief from dry eye symptoms. In a normal state, the tear film is isotonic and provides comfort and moisture to the eye. In the case of dry eye, however, the tear film becomes hypertonic, due to elevated salt concentration, and does not sufficiently hydrate or protect the surface of the eye, leading to increasing signs and symptoms of the condition. With its unique formulation, OPTIVE brand relieves the symptoms of dry eye in two ways. First, it provides a lubricating and 14 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 hydrating protective shield on the surface of the eye. The OPTIVE brand then penetrates below the surface to provide osmoprotection to the corneal epithelial cells from excessive salt levels. “While all artificial tears deliver moisture to the tear film, the OPTIVE™ products are formulated to provide lubrication of the ocular surface and are uniquely designed to protect surface cells from hyperosmotic stress that occurs in dry eye, including dry eye following LASIK,” said Joseph Vehige, O.D., Allergan Senior Director, Consumer Eye Care Research and Development. Laboratoires Blanchard is proud to introduce their new proprietary silicone hydrogel contact lens line, Exception. This is the perfect lens for patients who need a custom lens, says president Jean Blanchard. The material is from Contamac in England, and exclusive to Blanchard in Canada. “It took almost a year to develop the proper parameters and design,” explains Blanchard. Officially launched last August, the response to Exception has been extraordinary. “It’s very exciting because previously we had a great design but not the best possible material,” says Blanchard. “Now we have the equivalent of the best car with the best engine inside, with this latheable soft lens product.” In spheric designs Exception’s powers range from plus-minus 25.00D with a vast choice for base curve and diameter. On the toric side they have cylinders up to -5.00D at any axis, which is unusual in silicone hydrogel. One of the nice features is a very low modulus at 39, making it silky and very comfortable, says Blanchard. “The demand for specialty gas permeable lenses is strong, especially in Keratoconus and bifocals. We see our niche market doing extremely well within the overall market. There are thousands of new presbyopes | The Opticians Association of Canada | 15_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:41 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:17 Page 16 FULL-TIME OR PART-TIME, Contact Lenses are the New Essentials entering the marketi everyday and these lenses are strong performers. At Blanchard, our philosophy is continuous improvement, and we’re always working on new and more evolved designs so that our service can become even better.” Blanchard is currently working on a new generation bi-aspheric multifocal lens. The testing is almost complete and the lens should be introduced to the market late in 2008. Also look for a post-surgery-specific contact lens from Blanchard. “The RSS (refractive surgery specific) lens is for post-lasik and other post-surgical patents who are starting to develop visual problems and need a special lens for their flat corneal radius, which is a result of surgery.” Blanchard notes that 8-10 years after surgery problems often arise that are no longer surgically correctable. “And because the eye has been reshaped we need a new lens to accommodate those changes.” CIBA VISION’s latest silicone hydrogel innovation is AIR OPTIX™ AQUA, a breathable contact lens that delivers an advanced combination of oxygen and moisture via the new AQUA Moisture system, which includes a unique moisture agent that helps lubricate the lens for initial comfort, a patented lens material that helps maintain moisture by minimizing the rate of lens dehydration, and an ultra-smooth surface with superior wet-ability and excellent deposit resistance for comfort every day. “Seventy per cent of patients who experience eye irritation from their contact lenses never tell their eye care professional about it,” said Rick Weisbarth, vice president and Global Head Professional Development and Partnerships. “With the unique AQUA Moisture System and Dk/t of 138, AIR OPTIX AQUA lenses provide high oxygen transmissibility plus initial and all-day comfort, helping satisfy patient needs for improved comfort and health.” To help encourage healthy lens wear and higher patient compliance, CIBA VISION is recommending a monthly 16 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 replacement schedule for AIR OPTIX AQUA lenses, with regimen of daily wear or up to six nights of extended wear. AIR OPTIX™ for ASTIGMATISM is another innovative silicone hydrogel lens from CIBA VISION that provides outstanding performance and excellent stability, achieving 95 per cent first fit success, and the highest oxygen transmissibility of any available soft toric lens. The lens design features a wide optic zone to provide excellent visual acuity and ensures the lens fitting characteristics and axis orientation are consistent from patient to patient. Virtually all AIR OPTIX for ASTIGMATISM lenses have acceptable or optimal fit upon dispensing, stabilizing on the eye in just 30 seconds. Weisbarth notes, “This lens offers eye care professionals an opportunity to truly satisfy the unmet vision and comfort needs of their astigmatic patients, increasing patient satisfaction and truly improving lives.” With the launch of this lens last April, CIBA VISION introduced the AIR OPTIX brand name in Canada. In the future, new CIBA VISION silicone hydrogel product innovations will be launched under the AIR OPTIX brand name. Last but not least, Leis Vision is pleased to announce that they now carry the extended parameter range (around-the-clock in 15° steps) of the Extreme H2O 54% Toric LC lens, from Hydrogel Vision Corporation, makers of Extreme H2O soft contact lenses. This low cylinder lens (0.65D) is geared toward the 55 per cent of astigmatic patients from 0.50D to 1.00D. It was initially launched in 30° axis requiring fewer parameters, yet providing virtually the same vision as lenses within 10° axis. The expansion to 15° steps enables a more precise fit, while still requiring fewer parameters, enabling a quick fit. Free diagnostic sets of the Extreme H2O 54% Toric LC and MC lenses are available directly through Hydrogel Vision and through any of their authorized Extreme H2O distributors, including Leis Vision, Centennial and Laboratoire DL. ISI | The Opticians Association of Canada | 17_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:32 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:17 Page 18 Light Isn’t Always Right By Mary Field Artificial light may be promoting tumour growth and sleep deprivation. | Cancer is the big scare word of this and the last century. Why has it increased so much? One of the possible reasons is the use of artificial light. And sleep disorders are almost epidemic in the western world, with four billion dollars worth of sleep medication sold annually. Could artificial light be responsible for the psychological misery and adverse health affects associated with lack of sleep? The U.S.-based National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS), a component of the National Institutes of Health, supports research to understand the effects of the environment on human health. In December 2005, NIEHS released results of a study of laboratory mice that showed that nighttime exposure to artificial light stimulated the growth of human breast tumours by suppressing the levels of a key hormone called melatonin. The study also showed that extended periods of nighttime darkness greatly slowed the growth of these tumours1. The study results might explain why female night shift workers have a higher rate of breast cancer. It also offers a promising new explanation for the epidemic rise in breast cancer incidence in industrialized countries like the United States. "The risk of developing breast cancer is about five times higher in industrialized nations than it is in underdeveloped countries," said Les Reinlib, Ph.D., a program administrator with the NIEHS' grants division. 18 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 "These results suggest that the increasing nighttime use of electric lighting, both at home and in the workplace, may be a significant factor." Artificial light suppresses the brain's production of melatonin, a hormone that helps to regulate a person's sleeping and waking cycles. The new study shows that melatonin also plays a key role in the development of cancerous tumors. Ordinarily, melatonin is produced by the pineal gland only when the eyes are in darkness. The use of artificial light at night decreases substantially the time people are in darkness and thus the time that melatonin is produced. “Blind people have a 50 per cent less incidence of cancer than sighted people, because they produce melatonin over the whole night,“ notes Dr. Marty Alpert, researcher and principal of lowbluelights.com, a Cleveland-based company that was formed to commercialize the research around lighting and human health. “Cancer fighting drugs are most effective when given at 3 A.M. This is because in normal individuals melatonin | The Opticians Association of Canada | levels peak between 2 A.M. and 4 A.M.” Before 2001, it was believed that melatonin was produced by the pineal gland only when the eyes are in darkness in the same way that darkeness is assumed to control the circadian clock, which in turn through melatonin and other hormones controls many of the body’s activities. If this was true, then only periods of extended darkness would provide the benefits of increased melatonin production. But according to Dr. Alpert, in 2001 research conclusively proved that it is only the blue component of artificial light that supresses melatonin production2. This finding opened the door to filters that screen out the blue component. Lighting developers at Lighting Innovations Institute at John Carroll University in Cleveland, Ohio, have devised techniques of providing “blueless” light to the eyes in the evening before bedtime. This is accomplished by using light bulbs with coatings that do not transmit the blue light that suppresses melatonin, 74_vis09-8:8 04/09/08 09:15 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:17 Page 20 or by having subjects wear eyeglasses that filter out only the offending blue light. Filtering screens are also available for computer monitors or televisions, but users have to be careful to make sure there are no other sources of blue light in the room at the same time. These products allow the person to continue with normal after dark activities using the remaining colours of light. And interestingly, filter use doesn’t affect the alertness of the person using them. “The products are incredibly helpful to people with insomnia who are not responsive to medication,” says Dr. Alpert. “They act on the brain as if people are in darkness. We did a study that showed that people wearing the glasses get up less often during the night and have a much more restful sleep. Over 60 per cent of the wearers had extraordinary or very good results. In fact, many users said they would not give up the glasses under any circumstances.” According to a paper prepared by E.F. Carome and collegues at the Lighting Innovations Institute, which was presented at the Proceedings of the 2nd CIE Expert Symposium on Lighting and Health in Ottawa, in 20063, using the blue blocking filters for two to three hours before bedtime causes a substantial improvement in sleep for most people 20 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 by re-setting melatonin production. The improvement in sleep quality lasts throughout the night. “This is a completely natural way to re-establish proper melatonin production,” notes Dr. Alpert. “It’s such a simple solution, using the body to cure itself, in contrast to melatonin supplements (pills) that may give a person too much melatonin, which may very well help them to go to sleep but because the person isn’t secreting melatonin naturally, when the supplement wears off the person will get the signal that it’s time to wake up. By wearing the glasses or using other filters one’s own melatonin increases slowly and naturally and it peaks at the time melatonin would normally peak if artificial light did not exist. Our products have worked in many cases where medication did not.” Research is also being conducted on the benefits of blue light filters on mood disorders such as bi-polar disorder, which has been shown to improve remarkably with increased exposure to darkness4. Dr. Alpert says that other studies will soon show substantial improvement for women with post-partum depression. He also has anecdotal evidence that the filters help children with ADHD who are having trouble sleeping. Dr. Carome notes that while there is a considerable body of knowledge | The Opticians Association of Canada | showing that using artificial light at night may increase the risk of cancer, it will take many years to establish if the use of blue light blocking filters will reduce that risk. Given what’s at stake, let’s hope this research is undertaken soon. In the meantime, MAVC Health and Wellness is the Canadian distributor of LowBlueLights products. Their web address is www.mavchealth.com. ISI 1 http://www.niehs.nih.gov/oc/news/cancerlight.htm 2 BRAINARD, GC., HANIFIN, JP., GREESON, JM., BYRNE, B., GLICKMAN, G., GERNER, E. and ROLLAG, MD., Action spectrum for melatonin regulation in humans: evidence for a novel circadian photoreceptor, J. Neurosci., 16, 6405-6412, 2001. THAPAN, K., ARENDT, J. and SKENE, DJ., An action spectrum for melatonin suppression: evidence for a novel non-rod, non-cone photoreceptor system in humans, J Physiol .535, 261-267, 2001. 3 Means to Avoid the Suppression of Melatonin by Artificial Light: The Bright Side of Darkness CAROME, E.F., HANSLER R.L. and KUBULINS,V.E. Lighting Innovations Institute, John Carroll University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA Proceedings of the 2nd CIE Expert Symposium on Lighting and Health 7-8 September, 2006,Ottawa, Ontario, Canada 4 WEHR, TA., TURNER, EH., SHIMADA, JM., LOWE. CH., BARKER, C. and LEIBENLUFT, E., Treatment of rapidly cycling bipolar patient by using extended bed rest and darkness to stabalize the timing and duration of sleep, Biol. Psychiatry, 43, 822-828, 1998. BARBINI, B., BENEDETTI, F., COLOMBO, C., BERNASCONI, A., CIGALA-FULGOSI, M., FLORITA, M. and SMERALDI, E., Dark therapy for mania: a pilot study, Bipolar Disord., 1, 98-101, 2005. 23_vis08-9:Layout 1 04/09/08 15:52 Page 1 Doing it right means only doing it once. LET THE MODULAR DISPLAY SYSTEM WORK FOR YOU. Simply put, the patented Modular Display System is the industry’s quickest, most cost effective way to rejuvenate your frame dispensary. If you’re looking to increase your bottom line with minimal effort, then give MDS a call. 1-800-663-8527 www.modular-design.com 12/11/08 15:23 | COMPANY PROFILE | _vis11-8:8 Page 22 KIO YAMATO: Timeless El Bold, timeless and a step ahead, KIO Yamato makes | When purity and innovation combine you have a company known as KIO Yamato, named not after a person but an idea. Kio means pure and clean in Japanese and Yamato is the name of an ancient Japanese province, better known as ‘The Court of Yamato’, which literally signifies ‘The Great Peace’. Between 100 and 300 B.C. the Kyushu clan settled in this province and they ruled over the destiny of the country for fifteen centuries. The period was marked by many technological and cultural advances, like the European renaissance. Yamato, a narrow plain about 30 kilometers from Kyoto and Osaka, holds great archeological wealth, reminding today’s people of the first Japanese state whose power sprang from wisdom and grace. By Paddy Kamen Begun by Steven Lee ten years ago, KIO Yamato has straddled the Asian and North American worlds since its inception. Lee is Korean and divides his time between his home country and New York. The company always had offices in both regions and has recently opened a European office. Kevin Kim is director of KIO Yamato Optics Inc. because of the way we push the materials and technologies.” Leslie Bullock is the territory manager for Canada, Alaska and Hawaii. She is also an optician with a retail presence in Vancouver, and she fell in love with KIO Yamato at first sight. “I was so impressed with the beauty and quality of the frames that I started carrying them immediately. We have done very well with them because they speak to clients who appreciate superior workmanship and clean design.” In the KIO Yamato manufacturing process each frame front is pressed from a selected bar of titanium at a pressure of 400 tons, to create precision bevel work. It is this same bevel work along with exquisite finishes that enable KIO Yamato frames to capture light unlike any other frame on the market, explains Bullock. “Titanium is difficult to tool and colour and with it we have achieved unmatched purity of design and gorgeous colours. The titanium colours have a lustrous feel and quality, and new tints are being researched continuously. The colour combinations go through rigorous tests and reviews in order to finalize a look, which is always elegant.” The J-hinge is a technological innovation that the company is understandably proud of. “This is found in our signature series, and is made from beta titanium,” explains Bullock. “Some J-hinges are hidden by the shaping of the pure titanium temple and some are on the outside.” All KIO Yamato frames are made in Japan. “Today, Japan is the foremost producer of high quality frames in the world, particularly in titanium,” says Bullock, who adds that titanium is a misunderstood metal in the mind of consumers. “A frame can be stamped ‘titanium’ but only has 20 per cent low grade titanium content. At KIO Yamato, Despite the fact that the cost we use the purest titanium and do of titanium has risen dramatically things with it that others cannot in the last few years, KIO Yamato 22 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | eyew 12/11/08 15:24 Page 23 | COMPANY PROFILE | _vis11-8:8 ss Elegance, Art and Culture makes eyewear with elegance that lasts beyond one or two seasons. colours and detailed emphasis on the hinges and temples are the focal points. The hinges are simple, yet clean and the distinctive Moving into acetates was designs give the individual an only natural for KIO Yamato and incentive to look upon a pair of their high end zyls are admired O&X New York frames a little for combining a vivid colour bit longer in admiration of the with a more subtle shade for workmanship and ingenuity. accentuation. Bullock selects mid-to-high While once KIO Yamato was end optical retailers for KIO Yamato both the name of the company and O&X New York. “Retailers are and the moniker for their only collection, a newer brand, O&X always looking for new collections (Out and Exposed) New York, now that speak to a variety of clients. offers something very special for Some little shops have very good mid-range clientele. The two lines opticians and excellent clients, are clearly differentiated from one and that is where we want to be. another. KIO Yamato is distinctive We’re not exclusive but we want with its high-tech constructions, retailers who understand our subtle detailing, materials, and frames and philosophy. Fashion designs, which are all at the brands will rise and fall, but our forefront of the optical industry. quality and designs are timeless.” O&X New York also offers unique In contrast to many frame styling and quality while being more commercially priced. “A manufacturers, KIO Yamato still great frame is not only worth the produces older stock. “I have money but attracts attention to pieces that I have carried for five the wearer’s overall appearance,” years, which is unheard of in the explains Bullock. “Customers are industry,” says Bullock. “They saying this line is underpriced for don’t go out of fashion, we don’t the quality but it is designed to sell in higher volumes. Many of have any closeouts and all our KIO Yamato retailers also models sold throughout the carry the O&X to round out their world are carefully controlled and selection. O&X easily goes up regulated so that the stores against anything produced by the carrying these collections are major manufacturers.” ranked among the top optical The O&X New York collection retailers. Our exchange policy is goes deep into colours which also very lenient.” were chosen with extra care to Ultimately, it is the consumer complement the features and who decides. KIO Yamato and colour tones of practically any O&X New York wearers appreciate individual. Some styles target a the ingenious designs, influenced youth crowd with their funky twists and unique shapes, while by a profound focus on comfort, others attract a more mature fit and durability. Combine those clientele with conservative factors with a dedication to art colours, temples and classic eye and fashion and you have shapes. For the titanium frames, KIO Yamato. ISI strives to keep the price reasonable while never compromising on quality. “Lesser quality is not an option for us,” states Bullock. | The Opticians Association of Canada | VISION | sep_oct | 2008 23 _vis11-8:8 13/11/08 15:50 Page 24 | Business Management | By Shannon Falconer — Coordinator, Policy and Research — College of Opticians of Ontario Vision Screening for Children a Big Success 24 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | | The College of Opticians of Ontario is celebrating the completion of a highly successful pilot initiative that took place last September. Working collaboratively with the College of Dental Hygienists of Ontario and the York Region District School Board, the group launched the first School Readiness Screening Project – an initiative where opticians, dental hygienists and nutritionists volunteered their time to provide health care screening to children entering kindergarten. Caroline MacIsaac-Power, Registrar of the College of Opticians, helped to spearhead the pilot project, acting on the premise that there are many health factors that can affect a child’s learning, with vision playing a critical role. 25_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:26 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 13/11/08 15:50 Page 26 | Business Management | “But beyond that, it’s preventative in nature – it’s about families and communities. So when you have the school as the hub, it makes a tremendous difference to the future of the community.” Throughout the month of September, more than 1,200 children between the ages of four and six from a total of eleven schools in the York Region District were screened by opticians, dental hygienists and nutritionists. Children and their families made their way to the various health-care stations situated around school gymnasiums to speak with the experts, receive screenings and pick up information pamphlets. The project was modeled after the on-going ‘healthy child initiative’ from the United Kingdom, which has demonstrated to improve both academic achievement and student behaviour. Although it will take some time to determine the long-range benefits of the recent screening project, there were specific on-site situations where health concerns were detected and referrals made, demonstrating some immediate benefit from the program. Further, the project was well received by the community, with parent and child attendance as high as 98 per cent in some schools. Bill Hogarth is the director of education for the York Region District School Board. He states in an interview with The Toronto Star that he wants the unique pilot project to expand province-wide. “Appropriate health care impacts on students and their learning,” notes Hogarth. “But beyond that, it’s preventative in nature – it’s about families and communities. So when you have the school as the hub, it makes a tremendous difference to the future of the community.” 26 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 So where will the School Readiness Screening Project go from here? The group is currently working on compiling initial statistics from the pilot screening, which will be published in the COO December 2009 newsletter, and is looking to government for funding. Ideally this project would role out across the province and the country. ISI | The Opticians Association of Canada | 27_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:19 Page 1 28_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:14 Page 1 29_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:15 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:25 Page 30 | Practice Trends | Competing on Contacts Still Possible By Mary Field | I’ve written on several occasions about the Internet sale of contact lenses and eyeglasses keeping you up-to-date on actions that are taking place and suggesting strategies that could be used to assist opticians in fighting this trend. I’ve received many phone calls and e-mails recently from opticians who are angry, frustrated and bewildered by this trend. The following is an excerpt from one of those e-mails. It would appear the time has come to focus again on this issue. How can Internet sellers get away with breaking the law? That’s how most opticians view this issue. It is definitely a matter of law but also one of jurisdiction. In the case of dispensing, jurisdiction is provincial. Your regulatory body has authority only over activities taking place within your province. But unless the Internet seller is registered in your province there is nobody against whom your regulatory body can lay charges. Even if the Internet seller can be charged, the interpretation of law may not support a conviction as we saw in the case of the College of Opticians of British Columbia vs. Coastal Contacts in which the Supreme Court of B.C. did not find in favour of the regulatory body. On the good news side, a court in Britain recently did find an Internet seller guilty of breeching the Opticians Act and has fined the Internet seller _75,000. This is not a significant sum compared to the estimated millions spent on Internet sales of eyeglasses and contact lenses. But it does set some sort of precedent that may be used for a future challenge. 30 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | 07_vis07-8:Layout 1 19/06/08 11:27 Page 1 ATTRACTS AND MAINTAINS WATER... FOR ALL DAY COMFORT T H E CO N V E N I E N C E O F A D I S P OS A B L E L E N S W I T H T H E P ROV E N CO M F O RT O F P C H Y D RO G E L .T M • PC TechnologyTM creates a lens material containing phosphorylcholine (PC) molecules found naturally in cells throughout your body • PC molecules attract water to form a ‘shield’ around the lens keeping it healthy, moist and comfortable even after 12 hours of wear • Features aspheric optics designed for crisp, clearer vision • Optimized lens design and handling tint allows for easy lens insertion and removal For more information, contact your CooperVision Territory Manager at 1-888-475-8555. © 2008 CooperVision, Inc. CooperVision and the Eye Design, “See Beyond the Ordinary”, and Proclear are registered trademarks of The Cooper Companies, Inc., its subsidiaries or affiliates. PC Hydrogel and PC Technology are trademarks of The Cooper Companies, Inc., its subsidiaries or affiliates. _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:25 Page 32 | Practice Trends | Is price really a factor? From my observations of how opticians usually advertise, price and style are the two most commonly mentioned selling points. Whereas polls show service to be the most important factor for consumers, price may now become a dominating factor. The economic downturn in the U.S. has already started to have some spin-off effect on our economy. Frequency of purchase and replacement may become even more stretched out than it is now. We’ve already positioned ourselves in a price market and we will likely continue to compete with price, but we have to find a way to emphasize the ingredients folks will be missing if they opt for an Internet purchase. Value added in the case of optical purchases from a professional isn’t the second pair free or a reduced price on coatings or tints. Sure, we can offer those incentives but…the real value added is you. Opticians provide: • Education and counseling • Reliable and available service • Customized fit • Life-style specific advice It’s sad to say but opticians haven’t done a very good job of convincing consumers that the purchase of optical goods is a matter of safety. Consumers have come to view safety as irrelevant and have marginalized the service we provide. So how can we pull some of those people who have opted for Internet purchases back into our dispensaries? How can we encourage others who have not yet taken that step to exercise good judgment in making a purchasing choice? We can change public perception about the safety issue over time. The Opticians Council of Canada is currently developing a public relations project that should have long-term positive effects in this regard. But we have to deal with here and now. We have to find ways to meet the market. And, we have to develop effective responses to those customers who want us to provide them with the information they need to order from our Internet competitors. We must also have the skill and knowledge to trouble shoot Internet purchases. • If you don’t charge for these services you should. • If you don’t have any literature you can give your customers discussing the safety issues involved in their purchase, you should get some and hand it out when you’re asked for PDs, segment heights or contact lens specifications. • If you don’t currently have a website of your own, invest in a professionally developed site that will be in the top 10 of a Google or Yahoo search. • Internet sellers post pictures of feature frames they sell and they have trial packs of frames people can order. Why couldn’t you do the same thing with a credit card number as a security deposit? 32 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 Now is the time when we need to work together more than ever before. Your provincial and national associations, regulatory bodies and educational institutions (the Opticians Council of Canada) are embarking on a public relations project that will market our profession in a way that will make the writer of the e-mail introduction to this article once again proud to be an optician. Now is the time for you to support your provincial and national groups. You’ve identified the problem and you can be part of the solution. ISI | The Opticians Association of Canada | 33_vis11-8:8 07/11/08 10:37 Page 1 12/11/08 15:26 Page 34 | DESIGNER STORY | _vis11-8:8 Audacious and Artistic: Christian Roth and Eric Domege Heralding from Berlin and Paris, Christian Roth and Eric Domege emerged as designers from the New York art scene of the early eighties. 1. 2. By Paddy Kamen I magine a young man of 15 in Berlin. It’s 1975 and his father has just returned from a business trip to New York City, bringing with him a gift of cool shades — Raybans, to be precise. Now imagine a boy of 12 in Paris. His mother is a couturier and he breathes the air of fashion. It’s 1973 and he fakes poor eyesight so he can get a pair of eyeglasses, loving the way they change his appearance. Prescient indeed. Christian Roth is the young man who received the sunglasses, and Eric Domege is the boy who knew at age twelve that eyeglasses are a fashion accessory. The two have been friends and business partners for over 25 years, spanning the era of no-fashion to high-fashion eyewear with audacity. With no formal training or background they have created one of the most prestigious names in sunwear with a growing presence in the world of ophthalmic frames. Christian Roth is the label, but the business is the two of them, inextricably joined in the power of creation. 34 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 “The gift from his father started a love affair between Christian and sunglasses that extends to this day,” notes Domege in an interview with Vision Magazine. “He went on to work part-time in an optical shop while attending high school and college, and quickly realized that there wasn’t much of interest to offer customers.” Domege was studying advertising and marketing in Paris when he first met Roth in 1978. Then, when he moved to New York City in 1981 to continue his education, they met again by accident and became friends. They both loved haunting flea markets and vintage shops where one of the big attractions was the eyewear. As part of the clique of artists that formed around Andy Warhol and Club Area (a trendy nightclub with art | The Opticians Association of Canada | installation theme rooms), Domege and Roth thrived on the edgy dynamism of the New York scene. One of their friends was putting together a fashion show for Club Area and asked if they would use their vintage sunwear collection to develop something original for the show. “We revamped 12 pairs of vintage sunglasses with paint and new lenses,” explains Domege. “They were used on the runway and even featured on the cover of Women’s Wear Daily. This recognition gave us the push we needed to move into the business, and we originally called our company Christian Roth for Optical Affairs.” Luckily, Roth and Domege came of age in a time when it was possible to start an eyewear business with nothing more than talent, chutzpah and a prototype. Domege notes, “We started with one style and, fortunately for us, some of the greatest retailers were willing to give us 15:26 Page 35 | DESIGNER STORY | 12/11/08 5. 4. With Andy Warhol wearing a Christian Roth design it didn’t take long for other celebrities to catch the trend. Early adopters were Faye Dunaway and Diana Ross. Today’s celeb CR aficionados include Jennifer Garner, Mickey Rourke and Kate Hudson. | The Opticians Association of Canada | VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | 4. 14049 BL | 3. 14047 BK | 2. 14293 YE | Optical retailers like Henri Bendel in New York, Fred Segal in Los Angeles, and Marvin Freeman of Los Angeles, Chicago and NYC (the ‘godfather’ of the fashion eyewear industry according to Domege), all confirmed with their patronage that Roth and Domege were on the right track. Among the first retail shops in Canada to recognize their genius were The Brass Monocle in Calgary and Eyes on 12 in Vancouver. In Toronto, Bob Karir was an initial enthusiast and continuing supporter. The dynamic duo of Roth and Domege have their principal residence in Monaco, and also spend a lot of time in New York and Miami. They may create eyewear in their home-studio, but are just as likely to carry the design work wherever they go, focusing not just on their own brand but also working for others. “We recently created both ophthalmic and sunwear for Karl Lagerfeld, and we also designed the original Michael Kors collection,” says Domege. “We enjoy this The Christian Roth customer is work because it opens our brains up to someone who doesn’t want to be different stories besides our own.” associated with a logo. With no outside Regardless of the broader economic branding, the look appeals to those who have the confidence to be themselves. scene, Domege is confident that the “Our goal is always to make the person Christian Roth brand will continue to feel and look glamorous,” explains thrive. “We believe strongly that there Domege. “Our customers are widespread, will always be a market for well-conceived unisex and of all ages. One of the greatest designs and production with meticulous satisfactions is seeing the same frame attention to technology and detail. Our worn by Sharon Stone and Lenny Kravitz, frames do not go out of fashion and so or to find cool kids in Tokyo wearing the are not marketed by the season or the same frame as a chic Parisian woman. year. A lot of love is put into the product This is a great complement, and we and the consumer and retailer can tell the difference.” design our frames to fit all faces.” ISI Ten years ago, Roth and Domege joined forces with the Charmant Group, based in Japan, which produces and distributes their collections worldwide. “We joined Charmant because of their strength in quality and technology. They have allowed us to do some amazing things and I believe we have really challenged them at times with our designs. It’s a great partnership,” says Domege. 1. 14295 PU feedback and an opportunity. And if we went to them with a prototype they would agree to give it a try and wait patiently for several months until we could deliver the product.” 5. 14048 PK | 3. | _vis11-8:8 35 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:27 Page 36 | Finance | Economic Crisis May Spell Opportunity By JoAnne Sommers | In the wake of the worst financial crisis in almost 80 years, it’s tempting to cash in your investments and look for a safe place to ride out the storm. Tempting, but not advisable, says Dan Hallett, president of the Windsor-based investment research firm Dan Hallett & Associates. Even if the markets have panicked, investors should not, says Hallett. “I understand why people are frightened but in many cases it doesn’t make a lot of sense. Selling prices are disconnected from fundamentals and a lot of quality companies that aren’t dependent on financing are being thrown out along with everything else.” As long as fear and uncertainty abound, the market will continue to throw out a lot of good stocks, says Irwin Michael, the head of I.A. Michael Investment Counsel Ltd. in Toronto. Michael is a deep value investor, whose company runs the $1.1 billion family of ABC Funds. Value investors take a bottom-up approach to investing, searching for stocks that are priced low relative to their earnings potential, whereas growth investors look for fast-growing companies. For the past two to three 36 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | years, value stocks have taken a pounding, in part because high-flying commodity stocks were so expensive that value fund managers avoided them. ABC Funds has suffered losses similar to other value funds but Michael believes that better days are ahead for value investors. “You have to be very patient, stick to your style and not get dragged into the rush to liquidity,” he says. “It's always a good time for value and we think there are some tremendous values out there right now.” Robert Ironside agrees that there will be some wonderful buying opportunities in the market but thinks it’s too early to go shopping “Sit tight and keep your powder dry,” advises Ironside, who teaches finance at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Vancouver and works with the Knowledge Bureau in Winnipeg. “Be 37_vis11-8:Layout 1 06/11/08 15:08 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:28 Page 38 | Finance | cautious, stockpile your cash and wait until things settle down. Safety of principal is key right now. We still don’t know where the bottom is and it’s better to get back into the market a little late than too early.” When the time comes, Ironside urges that you do your homework. “Before you buy a fund, find out what it’s invested in. Is it a value or a growth fund? What is its philosophy? What are its major holdings and what costs are involved?” Ironside says he’s a proponent of value investing because investors tend to overspend when they try to chase growth. He also believes that value provides the best long-run returns. In fact, nearly every pure value fund on the Canadian market shows positive average annual gains over 10 and 15-year periods. “Growth firms tend to pay low dividends because they plough all of the extra money into growth investments. Unfortunately, investors tend to overpay for these stocks, thereby reducing their overall return.” Adrian Mastracci thinks that many 38 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 would work well for most investors.” Once you have a plan in mind, says Mastracci, remember to control what you can. “You can’t control what the market does, only how you interact with it.” investors may be mystified by how badly things have gone in the markets because they invested for the wrong reasons. “I suspect that many people invested based on the past performance of stocks and funds rather than as part of an overall investment strategy,” says Mastracci, portfolio manager with KCM Wealth Management Inc. in Vancouver. Investors need to start by asking themselves a basic question, he says. Do you want return on your money or return of your money? “That sets the tone,” says Mastracci. “For people who don’t like risk, the priority is capital preservation, so being in stocks and funds may not be the best strategy for them.” For those who want a return on capital, he recommends looking closely at your asset mix. “I suggest that you put 40 to 60 per cent in equities and the balance in fixed income. That mix | The Opticians Association of Canada | Mastracci uses a core and satellite system for choosing mutual funds. “The core stuff is your serious money and that should be about 80 per cent of the total. I recommend you buy index funds that track the TSX 60, the S&P 500 and the MSCI EAFE. And buy those funds individually so you can tweak them as needed.” The remaining 20 per cent of your mutual fund investments – what Mastracci calls the satellite portion of your portfolio – can be invested depending on your risk parameters and general inclinations, he says. “My best advice is don’t get rattled. Don’t get emotionally attached to your holdings and always use logic over emotion. Remember, the markets are cyclical and we’ve been through downturns before and come out stronger on the other side.” ISI 15_vis09-8:8 04/09/08 15:28 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:28 Page 40 | OAC News | OAC Update: Inter-provincial Recognition and More… By Mary Field | The Agreement on Internal Trade (AIT) is back on the radar again. As you may know, the first Ministers met this past spring and decided that mutual recognition of credentials of the Canadian workforce across provincial borders was not moving fast enough and that the Mutual Recognition Agreements (MRA) that had been signed did not go far enough in allowing foreign trained candidates into the professions. Subsequent to the Ministers’ meetings the Labour Mobility coordinators have been holding information sessions across the country for both regulatory bodies and associations. The OAC was in attendance at the Toronto meeting. Currently, opticians appear on a list of professions that are not compliant. This is a mystery because our profession’s regulatory bodies were the first group to broker an agreement. Opticians are likely listed because the Quebec regulators have not signed the MRA. Otherwise there are virtually no barriers to mobility within the group of nine. Here’s the short version of what is expected by the government. • Any worker certified for an occupation by a regulatory authority of one province or territory shall be recognized as qualified to practice that occupation by all other provinces and territories. • Such recognition shall be granted expeditiously without further material training, examinations or assessment requirements. • Premiers further directed that any exceptions to full labour mobility would have to be clearly identified and justified as required to meet a legitimate objective such as the protection of health or public safety. Provincial Activities On September 27th the Opticians of Manitoba held their annual presentation ceremony for students graduating from the NAIT/OAC optical programs and for those individuals who had successfully challenged the national examination(s). Preceding the dinner and ceremony was a full day of continuing education. Also at the end of September the OOM School 40 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | Screening team completed vision screening on 195 students over a two-day period. The OOM will be doing an adult screening project at the Workers’ Compensation Board annual health day later in November. The Saskatchewan Ophthalmic Dispensers Association held their 2008 convention on October 18th and 19th in Regina and the Opticians of British Columbia (OBC) hosted an education day that same weekend including a special two-hour workshop on communications and branding of the profession. The Ontario Opticians Association had another successful Inside Optics conference October 5th at the Royalton Hospitality Centre in Woodbridge. By the time this article is published Vision Canada will have hosted Vision Canada 2008 in Halifax and will be starting to prepare for the 2009 edition which will be held in Calgary. In conjunction with Vision Canada 2008 the OAC and the Nova Scotia Society of Dispensing Opticians hosted an RGP fitting lab for Maritime students enrolled in the NAIT/OAC Advanced Practice Contact Lens program. As fewer and fewer opticians fit RGP lenses it has become increasingly difficult for opticians in training to acquire the basic fitting skills they need. It is nevertheless extremely important for us to retain this training as part of our contact lens competencies. If you are in a position in your province to mentor a contact lens student let us know and we’ll make sure you become integrated into the practical training module for a student in your area. _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:28 Page 41 Group Health Insurance is now available for OAC members. We’ve been searching for years for a program that would provide good benefits at a reasonable price and that would be available to dispensaries with a small staff. At this editorial deadline we don’t have details ready for publishing but when you read this you will be able to get all the information you need from the OAC website (www.opticians.ca) or by calling us at 1-800-847-3155. Selling the Profession – How many times have you been asked the difference between an optician, optometrist and ophthalmologist? How many times have you been referred to as an obstetrician? Is it easy to explain to consumers the importance of consulting with a licensed professional when making a purchase of glasses or contact lenses? We all have logos and perhaps mottos that identify the places we work and the business philosophy we practice under. But that doesn’t define the profession itself. If we ask members of the public what image comes to mind when the words ‘registered nurse’ are mentioned they would visualize someone who is responsible for your health and well being when you are in a hospital. If we ask those same people what image comes to mind when the words ‘registered optician’ are mentioned they would likely visualize someone who works in a retail environment and who sells eyeglasses and contact lenses. They wouldn’t necessarily identify our profession with what they consider the ‘serious’ part of vision care. The OAC is undertaking a national survey through Ipsos-Reid to tell us exactly what perception consumers have of opticians, along with what values they’re looking for when they invest in dispensing services. Maybe the scenario I described above isn’t correct. Maybe the impression you have of how our profession is viewed isn’t accurate either. But one way or another we need to have a true picture of the status quo so we can shape our messages to the public in a way that will better connect opticians with public perception of vision health. Stay tuned for the results of that survey. One way that you can connect the sale of eyeglasses and contact lenses (and thus the profession) to healthy vision is through your own community outreach projects. • Speak to special interest groups like your local Parent Association and find out if your local schools would like someone to give a class to primary grade students on the importance of vision health and properly fitted and dispensed eyeglasses and contact lenses. If you’re not comfortable speaking to large groups, you can arrange for someone from your provincial association or regulatory body to speak. • Alberta Optician Holly Keyko and her vision screening team from Wal-Mart participated in a women’s health day project and were gratified by the enthusiastic response they had from attendees. Their vision screening station was the most popular working exhibit at the event. The Ontario Opticians Association and the College of Opticians of Ontario collaborated on an important school-screening project, which you will read about in the pages of this magazine under Business Management. • Your local pharmacy likely has a special health day when people can get their blood pressure checked and maybe have a flu shot. What about having an information station about vision care and even provide vision-screening services? If you need help organizing any of these projects call the OAC office and we’ll be happy to offer guidance. ISI | The Opticians Association of Canada | VISION | sep_oct | 2008 41 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:29 Page 42 | Motivate yourself | Today is a Good Day By James W. Ahola | Although some of life’s lessons are common and have been heard before, some are well worth repeating. I received a bittersweet call the other day from a friend of mine. Her eldest son has taken a great job opportunity and is moving out west. She is happy for him as he begins to spread his wings and leave her nest, but at the same time her motherly heart breaks a little. A certain part of her family life has ended. It is at moments like this when you reflect and remember once again that time never repeats itself. Too soon those once mundane daily moments that we easily take for granted suddenly become precious memories that we would give anything to relive. Whoever said time is the most precious commodity was right. All the world's a stage, And all the men and women merely players. They have their exits and their entrances; And one man in his time plays many parts... William SHAKESPEARE, "As You Like It" (1564 - 1616) 42 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 I am getting older, as are my children, my parents, my work associates and my clients. As time marches on, relationships change. The good old days have never come back and no matter what, they never will. Opportunities also change. The windows of opportunity quietly open and close as time passes. I remember a real estate developer once told me, “The best time to buy a property is yesterday. If it is still available today then today would be the second best time.” I have heard the same about planting trees, launching a business, or starting a serious relationship. Opportunities, like everything else, do not last forever. After getting off the phone with my friend and reflecting on what she was going through I considered my own life and how time was continuing to march on. Daily, life gives me precious moments with family, friends, work associates and countless others. Have I truly appreciated these unique incidents that life has graciously bestowed upon me? I am afraid that I have not. I have either been too rushed preparing for or | The Opticians Association of Canada | worrying about tomorrow or too engrossed in the activities and regrets of yesterday, and thus allowed many of today’s precious moments to slip through my fingers. So what am I doing differently since my friend’s call? Well, for starters, I am embracing my wife and children more often and for a little longer each time; today’s hugs cannot be bought tomorrow. I am enjoying those business encounters a little more and seizing opportunities as they present themselves. I am keeping the times of anger or disappointment to a minimum, there are better ways to spend my few hours. I am willing to be more vulnerable, for the old adage “nothing ventured, nothing gained” holds true for more than just business. I am giving more of myself and the best of myself and not waiting till tomorrow to do so. I am trying to drink in all that life is offering while giving the best that I can. For I have no promise of tomorrow, and I will never get today, or even this moment, again. ISI 43_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:06 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:29 Page 44 | Optician Profile | Sara Moshurchak By JoAnne Sommers | Sara Moshurchak loves her job so much that she can’t think of anything she show, because some of the cutting edge doesn’t like about it. The 30-year-old owner of Granville Eyeland Framemakers in designers just can’t afford to exhibit at Vancouver is one fortunate woman indeed. the big shows. Right now we have some Granville Eyeland was started by happened. “Putting the financing beautiful buffalo horn frames by Klaus Klaus Sebök, a frame maker trained in together was a real challenge,” says and others, and we really like the Germany. Sebök has been creating his Moshurchak. “But I finally succeeded. It handmade wood frames by Herlicht from own limited edition collection of frames helped that I knew the business very Germany. They are amazing and while since 1965, and selling them exclusively intimately, because Klaus let me run it on they don’t go flying off the shelves every in his own store for the past 14 years. my own for two years with full access to day, they are perfect for people who like something different. We don’t carry Moshurchak originally wanted to be all the financial information. And I was super-trendy designers but rather able to hire him back, so I continue to an optometrist, but after starting a benefit from his expertise.” products that allow wearers to express pre-optometry program at university, she realized that opticianry was the best way Granville Eyeland has its own lab. their creativity.” for her to do what she enjoys. “I like the lab work and working with my hands and I love the sales aspect. I also like solving problems and when customers have no idea what they want I really enjoy helping them figure it out. That’s when I get down to asking a lot of questions.” “We do all our drilling by hand and we also offer sight testing, which, while not a direct revenue source really enhances the business. I like the variety of work we do here because it keeps us flexible and keeps our brains sharp.” Moshurchak is clearly very well suited to running her own business. “I’m a bean counter and I love setting goals, managing systems and developing action plans. One of my current goals is to attract a younger crowd, more my own age. Our current clientele is generally older but younger families are moving After a few years of working into the downtown area and I’m curious together the two started talking about about that segment.” the possibility of Moshurchak buying the In addition to Sebök’s collection, the business. “It was wonderful to have the store has a couple of house brands. “We opportunity to buy an existing business like to feature eyewear that customer’s that I loved and knew so well; plus I can’t find in other locations,” says knew the customers,” she explains. After Moshurchak. “I enjoy buying at the seven years, the purchase finally smaller shows in Europe, like the Munich During her optometry training, Moshurchak met Sebök when he came in to Douglas College’s program to demonstrate soldering. “I was fascinated by him and the fact that he made his own frames, so after graduating I applied to work with him and was hired.” 44 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | As vice president of the British Columbia Opticians Association, Moshurchak is extra-busy. What prompted her to become involved? “Well the president, Cindy Koszegi, called me and her passion for the profession really spoke to me. I want to help grow the profession and being a member of the executive has certainly helped me in the business through the networking opportunities. I enjoy meeting with politicians and making our case on the issues that impact our livelihood and I believe that by working together we can all be stronger and more successful.” Moshurchak laughs readily, especially when trying to answer the question about what she may not like about her profession. She’s clearly trying hard to come up with something, but in the end says, “I even like the fact that we are open seven days a week. That’s great!” ISI 45_vis11-8:8 06/11/08 15:04 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:29 Page 46 | What’s New | Novelties from Nikon Nikon Optical Canada announces that SeeMax™ Progressive 12 in 1.60 and 1.67 are now available with Transitions® VI brown and gray and that the 1.74, now manufactured right here in Canada, is surfaced and coated on a full range of products. Modular Design Opens a New State of the Art Showroom Modular Design Systems, known for its creativity in new office designs, renovations of existing offices and the design of new frame dispensaries, has opened the doors of its new state of the art showroom on October 15th, 2008. Modular Design’s office and showroom has been located, for the past 14 years, at the same address: 55 Administration Road in Concord, Ontario, and now under a brand new look. SeeMax Progressive 12 - 1.60 Transitions VI is available in total sphere +5.00D to -7.50D cylinder up to -4.00D, addition +0.75 to +3.50D. SeeMax Progressive 12 - 1.67 Transitions VI is available in total sphere +5.00D to -10.00D cylinder up to -4.00D, addition +0.75 to +3.50D. Using the unique Nikon Digital Surfacing™ technology, SeeMax Progressive offers patients a completely new and harmonious visual experience thanks to its state-of-the-art nanometric optical technologies that include: 3D Customization™, 3D Optimization™ and 3D Aberration Filter™. With SeeMax Progressive lenses peripheral vision is 60% wider, distortion is reduced by at least 40%, auto-focus is instantaneous and vision is optimized via prescription power. SeeMax Progressive 12 Transitions VI lenses provides UV400 protection and all the benefits of Transitions VI Advanced Performance. SeeMax Progressive 12 1.60 and 1.67 Transitions VI lenses are available with Nikon’s new coating – SeeCoat, providing the world’s highest level of scratch resistance, optimized transparency and twice the lens durability. They are also available in Nikon HCC ICE and HCC coatings. The company is also proud to announce that 1.74 is now manufactured right here in Canada. Yet another first, Nikon Optical Canada is surfacing and coating 1.74 on a full range of products. Not only will professionals benefit from quicker delivery times but, they can also offer patients a branded Nikon product and the thinnest and most aesthetic plastic lens. Nikon 1.74 lenses offers unparalleled visual clarity, complete UV400 protection and a name you can trust. The Most Precious Among the Precious Line Brian Wolcovitch, spokesman for Modular Design said “we want to reflect our current display products and furniture in an environment conducive to showing prospective clients what we are capable of delivering in terms of quality and design.” Frank Fumagalli, president of Modular Design adds “The new showroom will give our client a very good idea of what we are capable of delivering, in terms of quality and design. We continue to welcome visitors from all over Canada and USA and we feel anyone who is thinking of making any changes to their offices would benefit from a visit to our new showroom and resource centre”. The Art Temple 70 model from the Lindberg’s Precious collection has won the Silmo d’Or award in the Luxury category. The Precious line is highly exclusive eyewear for the “feinschmecker” (gourmet) who wants the very best. Each frame is a piece of jewellery, hand-made by Lindberg‘s goldsmiths from 18-carat gold, platinum, mammoth tooth, buffalo horn, and, not least, diamonds. Brian Wolcovitch said “because of our niche market and to our knowledge, we have the only facility like this, where a prospective client can come in and see first hand our extraordinary display system and actually look at the cabinetry from a quality and design aspect.” Lindberg’s Art Temple 70 is an artistic, organic design with no less than 18 diamonds, all meticulously mounted by the finest craftsmen in the industry. The diamond mounted at the extreme end of the temple is an elegant, sophisticated addition to the design. It is visible behind the ear when worn. “We pride ourselves on the quality of the products we manufacture and we can show, firsthand the design, beauty and versatility of the products we manufacture.” “Our new showroom and resource centre gives us the opportunity to walk through the design process with our prospective clients and show them hands on what we can offer them as we go along.” 46 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | Lindberg 2103 | | The Opticians Association of Canada | Like other Lindberg frames, Art Temple 70 is made-to-measure, thus providing optimum comfort for the wearer. It comes in 18-carat solid yellow, rose, white gold, and platinum, and the wearer’s name is, of course, engraved on the temple. 47_vis11-8:Layout 1 12/11/08 15:43 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:30 Page 48 | What’s New | | Mod. Isis | Versès Optik Becomes EGO Optiska Canada Derek Lam Introduces SS09 Optical and Sunglass Collection New for this Spring/Summer 09 are four optical and five sun styles all hand-crafted by one of the finest Japanese artisans under the most strict quality standards. Eye-catching with its distinctive Derek Lam features, modern optical and sun styles are offered in a variety of vintage inspired, round, oval, rectangular shapes and will thrill contemporary yet fashionable women everywhere. The new collection, distributed in Canada by Modo Eyewear, includes also some progressive friendly shapes such as Style 217 and 107. Both collection, offered in a variety of titanium and acetate frames, do come in unique colour combinations like orange and black or orange and navy just like the season’s most stylish runway tints. Details, like the rounded temples and the metal logo plaque on the inside of the temple, confer a rich yet subtle feel. The Derek Lam Eyewear SS09 collection will be distributed through a tight league of selected eyewear, specialty and department stores across the world. 48 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 Further to a partnership agreement with its principal supplier from Sweden, EGO Optiska AB, and to respect the international image, Versès Optik uses the name of EGO Optiska Canada. This partnership ensures a higher level of stability and security, offering more possibilities for exclusive agreements with customers. André Bélanger, now general manager of the enterprise, is in charge of Canadian operations. Administratively, payments can be made to either of the company names. EGO specializes in Swedish trademarks and design. The company has two design teams, one established at the Stockholm head office and the other in Padova, Italy. Its first agreement was for the Lacoste brand in the 70’s. Today, EGO counts close to 15 brands in its portfolio. What makes them unique are the close relations established between the brand owners and EGO. This partnership ensures that the products are developed accordingly with the brands, making them as distinctive as possible. EGO, a major supplier in the North of Europe, is now present in more than 20 countries throughout Europe and Asia. It had doubled his turnover every year since 2005 due to popular licenses agreements, the hire of a very internationally respected design team and the new expansion towards sunglasses. This 45-year-old family business is now run by Ronald Gezang, son of founder Edward Gezang (Edward Gezang Optiska). The core value is without a doubt the friendly attitude between the company, the owners and its clients. | The Opticians Association of Canada | 53_vis09-6 08/09/06 12:27 pm Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:30 Page 50 | What’s New | Millenium Rhymes with Swarovski The very latest Da Vinci Roma collection, distributed in Canada by Tek Optical, has been released. The six new models, impeccably detailed with Swarovski crystal stones, are part of the Millennium line. | DV 1415 | These crafted stainless steel models, characterized by crystals imbedded in the frame, provide a subtle elegance to a woman’s fashion persona. LULU Signs Annabelle | L488 | Retro is hotter than ever and the wayfarer has been seen everywhere from London to New York. Lulu has taken this classic masculine style and made her own feminine version for the ladies who want to wear the wayfarer but couldn’t find the right accent to their feminine faces. The L488 “Annabelle” is more uplifting with custom designed metal Lulu Guinness initial décor on the temples embedded into rich acetate colour temples. This creates a brilliant new dimension to the frame giving it richness and making it ageless. The versatile tints have something for every type of glamour girls: black, demi amber and clear navy. A Canadian in the OLA Hall of Fame Bruce Calhoun, vice-president, Research and Development at Riverside Opticalab, is one of the 12 industry veterans who has been honoured at the 9th annual OLA Hall of Fame banquet. The event has been held on November 6, the opening day of the OLA 2008 Annual Meeting, in Nashville, TN. The OLA Hall of Fame began in 2000 as The Optical Pioneers. Its purpose was to recognize “the contributions of those who participated in the establishment of the wholesale optical industry in its founding years.” Over time, recognition has progressed to persons from any era and any part of the optical lab industry, and thus the name was changed to the Hall of Fame. The banquet is held each year at The OLA Annual Meeting, to bring together optical industry people – new and veteran – to celebrate the rich heritage of this strong and diverse industry. The recipient of the 2008 OLA Director’s Choice Award, Gordon Keane, is president of Digital Vision, a Portland-based company specialized in automating optical laboratories. 50 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | 49_vis07-8:8 19/06/08 11:17 Page 1 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:30 Page 52 | FU 311 | | What’s New | New Lines for Sassy Eyewear Sassy Eyewear has added a line and re-launched another in their product range. While the Fusion collection stands out for its very hip and fashionable metal frames, the Identity line embraces a broad clientele. The Fusion unisex models put the emphasis on shapes and colours. All frames present an up-to-date fashionable style with clean lines and bold colours that represent each individual’s unique personality. The Identity collection is divided in four categories: XL, I-Face, Petite and Pietro Baroni. XL offers six large models, mostly for men, while I-Face features about 30 trendy and more fashionable frames, designed mainly for today’s women. Petite suits children or small faces. Pietro Baroni presents 20 elegant models for men who are looking for style. Frames from both collections are mostly available in three colours. Discovery of Receptor’s Function Could Notably Halt Blinding Diseases An international team of researchers has discovered what promises to be the on-off switch behind several major diseases. In the advance online edition of today’s Nature Medicine, scientists from Sainte-Justine Hospital Research Center, the Université de Montréal and the Institut national de la santé et de la recherche médicale (INSERM) in France report how the GPR91 receptor contributes to the activatation of unchecked vascular growth, which causes vision loss in common blinding diseases. These findings could also have wide-ranging and positive implications for brain tissue regeneration. While investigating the molecular mechanisms that lead to vision loss, the research team uncovered that the GPR91 receptor can mediate irregular vascular growth that is responsible for some of the main causes of blindness in the industrial world: retinopathy of premature infants, diabetic retinopathy in adults (vision loss or blindness that affects up to 90 percent of diabetics) or age-related macular degeneration in seniors (central vision loss). “We found that GPR91 is a master regulator of blood vessel growth, which upon enhanced activation leads to the unchecked and anarchic proliferation of vascular networks, which is the hallmark of retinopathies. This uncontrolled overgrowth can ultimately cause the retina to detach and a person to lose their sight,” says Dr. Mike Przemyslaw Sapieha, the study’s lead author and a scientist at the Sainte-Justine Hospital Research Center and the Université de Montréal. “With the identification of GPR91 as a key player in this disease process, we can move forward in designing treatments that block the receptor and consequently stop vision loss,” adds Dr. Sapieha. “Inhibition of GPR91 has great therapeutic potential to halt these blinding diseases.” Hilco Introduces it's Eyeglass Case Collection Classical Radiance Viva International Group has debuted Classical Radiance, the latest styles from the Catherine Deneuve Lunettes collection for fall 2008. This stunning trio includes CD 259, CD 260 and CD 261. Hilco eyeglass cases are about fashion, trendy textures and colours. While its Patent Leather & Snake collection has subdued winter colours, its Brocade line inspired by upscale “Toile” and Brocade fabrics will be the splash of tints for this winter. A decorative Florentine pattern details the temples and end pieces of all three of these carefully designed metal styles. The modified oval front shape of CD 259, a full-rimmed model, provides an elegant look that’s timeless. CD 260 offers a soft rectangle front shape and CD 261 features a semi-rimless modified oval front profile. Spring hinges and adjustable nose pads provide extra comfort and durability to this distinguished trio. Eye-catching animal patterns like the Zebra & Croc collection is stylish and very distinctive. Hilco eyeglass cases protect glasses and keep lenses scratch-free while making a fashion statement. 52 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 These styles are currently offered in a variety of rich metallic colours, including purple, raspberry and satin brown. | The Opticians Association of Canada | _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:31 Page 53 | Mod. 5019 | | What’s New | Optiq Frames Release Optiq Frames, is launching the latest frames of the Marylin Monroe ophthalmic and sunglass line. The collection continues to be a popular brand with Optiq customers who are looking for glamour style and value. Marilyn Monroe has been an international icon since the 50’s and continues to enjoy great popularity among women of all ages. The Marylin Monroe collection is chic and elegant, and marked by design elements featuring an edgy, subtle and vintage spirit. The line of 21 ophthalmic styles and 2 Rx’able sunglasses shows refined glamour and style with models that are extremely varied and always echo Marylin herself. The ophthalmic collection features the latest styles and temple treatments while keeping a classic feel that appeals to fashionistas of all ages. The team’s study also provides promise that the GPR91 receptor could preserve neurons. “Neurons are key sensors in retina oxygenation and serve as key players in the repair process of the retina,” explains Dr. Sylvain Chemtob, director of the study and a neonatal researcher at the Sainte-Justine Hospital Research Center and professor at the Université de Montréal’s Department of Pediatrics, Ophthalmology, Pharmacology and the School of Optometry. “Given the similarities between the retina and the brain, we can envision applying our findings in the retina to the brain,” says Dr. Chemtob. “Activation of the GPR91 receptor could be beneficial in helping salvage neurons in damaged brain tissue in stroke or head injury victims.” | CD 259, 260 and 261 | Moreover, it is conceivable that interfering with the GPR91 receptor could be used to stop cancer growth, notes Dr. Sapieha. “If you stop GPR91 from allowing blood vessels to expand and supply a tumour with nutrients and oxygen, one can significantly hamper growth of the cancer.” | The Opticians Association of Canada | VISION | sep_oct | 2008 53 _vis11-8:8 12/11/08 15:45 Page 54 | What’s New | How to Become Essential ProDesign has recently launched a new collection, Essential, for those who want to distinguish themselves. This line consists of modern titanium frames of a classic design with a pronounced vintage reference. By using the latest technology to create delicate carvings on the edges of the rim and temples, the frame features a continuous pattern within a pattern in contrasting colours. Additionally, the designers have created a surprising wow-effect when you look at the frames from different angles. Seen from front; however, nothing disturbs the harmonious interaction between the frame and the face. Discreet, chic and surprising at the same time, this collection gives the wearer a distinct energetic and efficient look. Transitions Optical Launches the Healthy Sight Institute | Mod. 1359 | Transitions Optical unveiled the Healthy Sight Institute during the SILMO, announcing this educational and learning resource for health and vision care professionals worldwide. Supported by Transitions Optical, the Healthy Sight Institute is guided by a Global Steering Committee of more than 25 health and eye care professionals – such as Mary Field, associate editor of Vision Magazine – and is dedicated to the protection and preservation of healthy sight for all people. In its first phase, the Healthy Sight Institute will serve as a dynamic knowledge center for professionals in the form of an online resource center (www.healthysightinstitute.org), making available a comprehensive range of preventive eye health and vision care information and resources. The site will be a rich source of clinical updates and publications, professional education courses and public education tools. Drawing on the expertise of its geographically diverse and multidisciplinary Steering Committee (professionals from U.S., Canada, England, India, France, Colombia, Tunisia, Italy, Brazil, Mexico, South Africa, Switzerland and China), the Healthy Sight Institute Web site will also provide a forum for education and collaboration among health and vision care professionals, optical industry leaders, policy makers, and the public for a wider understanding of proactive and preventive eye care choices. In addition to the Web site, the Healthy Sight Institute will develop specific initiatives to address issues that impact vision and healthy sight. Initially, the Healthy Sight Institute will address issues facing women and children, a higher-risk group for eye health. “Our hope for the Healthy Sight Institute is that it will serve as a valuable forum for delivering education and promoting collaboration in the quest to elevate the importance of vision enhancement and protection, giving vision care the attention it deserves as a critical global health issue,” said Bette Zaret, senior vice president of global marketing, Transitions Optical. “That’s why Transitions Optical is supporting this endeavor, and has played an important first step in bringing together this group of esteemed health care and vision care professionals from around the world to share their expertise and to hopefully drive positive change.” HOYA Canada Expands Strong growth at HOYA Canada makes it necessary to expand and reorganize the sales department. The company has established a new regional structure by creating an eastern region, inclusive of Ontario, Atlantic Canada and Manitoba. New sales positions, including Southwestern Ontario and Southern Alberta have also been created and filled. Maria Henderson is appointed as regional manager for the new East region. Mark Ritter, previously with a leading frame manufacturer, is appointed as SW Ontario territory manager. Alison Meating, previously with a leading optometric account, will fill the Southern Alberta position. The HOYA GTA territory vacancy is still pending. "It is gratifying that even in today's uncertain economic climate HOYA Canada continues to have tremendous sales growth due to its outstanding "value" positioning. Sales expansion leads to creation of growth opportunities for our people and the advisability to bring fresh outside talent into the HOYA family", said David Pietrobon, president of HOYA Canada. 54 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | 13/11/08 09:00 Page 55 | BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY | Excellent opportunity. Newly renovated optical store in rapidly growing Red Deer, Alberta. Downtown location with 2 ophthalmologists in the building. Eyelogic and lab on premise. For more information, call (403) 346-1522. Price is negotiable. ________________________ Expand or start your own optical business! 20 minutes west of downtown Toronto! 19 years established dispensary in busy medical building. Turnkey operation in a top level location with great street level exposure. Over 9300+ patients in our database, and two doctors who come in for eye exams. 2007 net profit 175K, selling price is $135K; [email protected]. ________________________ Great Opportunity. Well established optical store in the Metro Vancouver area for sale. Approx 18 years , same location , excellent clientele base. Finishing lab, contact lenses. Eyelogic equipment on premise as well. Call (604) 583-6155 or e-mail Includes inventory, furniture, files, slit lamp, keratometer, chair, projector & older edging equipment. Located in professional building with 2 Ophthalmologists down the hall. I will also consider partnership with OD or will run office if needed. Selling due to health problems. $ 45,000.00 firm. Call (604) 530-6155 or e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ | EMPLOYMENT | Are you a licensed Optician/ Contact Lens Fitter with management experience? Are you able to supervise staff in a busy environment and motivate them to sell? Are you organized and able to multi-task? Are you looking for a position where you are compensated for doing a great job? Do you want to live and play in the Okanagan? If you answered yes to all of the above, our busy optical in Kelowna needs you! Please e-mail your résumé (and include references) to [email protected] or fax to (250) 712-0270. ________________________ [email protected]. ________________________ Optical Business for Sale: 5 years optical business for sale in Richmond, B.C. Inside shopping Mall (Alberdeen Center). Good business and traffic, beside food court. Please contact Magie at (604) 562-9181. ________________________ Optometry/Optical Dispensary for sale in growing area of Langley, BC. Established business that has been an a successful optometry office in the past and dispensary. Attention optometrists! Full or part time associate required for busy practice in Bowmanville Ontario. Great opportunities with above-average remuneration. Please fax résumé to (905) 623-4583 or e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ Brand new Mississauga Optometry office is looking for two experienced, motivated individuals to work in our dispensary and our front desk or one who is comfortable doing both. Ideal candidates have sales experience in an optometrist office or optical store who are comfortable dispensing. Excellent opportunity to get involved in a modern new office from the start. If interested please résumé to e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ Georges et Phina, distributor of award winning eyewear is seeking dynamic full time sales reps for the following territories : BC/Alberta, Saskatchewan/Manitoba and Ontario (from East of Yonge in Toronto to Ottawa). All applicants must have 10 years experience in sales within the optical industry, a track record of reliability, excellent customer service, and proven sales results. Georges et Phina offers you the potential for growth with it’s winning collections, an excellent support structure, product and sales training and a high earning potential. Please forward C.V. to : [email protected]. ________________________ Image Optical Brampton in northeast Brampton (Airport and Bovaird) is looking for a licensed optician immediately. Full time positions only. Excellent pay and benefits. Flexible schedule. Minimum 1 year experience with eyeglasses and contact lenses. Reply with résumé by fax (905) 494-0411 or e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ LASIK MD is Canada's leader in laser vision correction. Our organization is proud to be one of Canada’s 50 Best Managed Companies in 2007. We have 22 clinics across Canada and the United States. LASIK MD in Montreal, Laval, Brossard, Quebec and Sherbrooke is currently searching for Optometrists and Opticians (full-time and part-time). Generous remuneration will be offered to suitable candidates. If you are interested in working in the exciting field of refractive surgery, please send your résumé to Geneviève Pilon at [email protected] or by fax to: (514) 904-1199. Please indicate reference # QODOP03 in the subject of your job application. ________________________ LASIK MD is the leading provider of laser vision correction in Canada. Our organization is proud to have been named one of the 50 Best Managed Companies in Canada. We are happy to announce the opening of our 21st location in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan and are searching for currently Opticians, (full time and part time). Generous remuneration will be offered to suitable candidates. If you are looking for a meaningful career within a challenging, and rewarding work environment, please send your résumé to Genevieve Pilon at [email protected] or by fax at: (514) 904-1199. Please indicate reference #SASOP04 in the subject of your job application. ________________________ LASIK MD is the leading provider of laser vision correction in Canada. Our organization is proud to have been named one of the 50 Best Managed Companies in Canada. We are happy to announce the opening of our 22nd location in Waterloo, Ontario and are currently searching for Opticians, (full time and part time). Generous remuneration will be offered to suitable candidates. If you are looking for a meaningful career within a challenging, and rewarding work environment, please send your résumé to Genevieve Pilon at [email protected] or by fax at: (514) 904-1199. Please indicate reference # WKOOP09 in the subject of your job application. ________________________ | classified ads | _vis11-8:8 Marcolin Canada is hiring Sales Representatives in the territory of Canada, carrying the following brands : Tom Ford, Roberto Cavalli, Just Cavalli, Mont Blanc, Ferrari, Miss Sixty. Optical experience is necessary. For inquiries, please call (877) 393-5665, fax (866) 672-3932 or e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ Oshawa, Ontario. Optometry office requires an optician or student optician for professional optometry office / optical store. Modern office, friendly staff, positive work environment. Base rate is $12-15/hour and $16-25/hour with supervisory responsibilities. Remuneration will be based on experience. Fax résumé in confidence to (905) 434-7904, or e-mail: [email protected]. ________________________ Sales professional for the province of British Columbia, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and the province of Quebec. Salary, commission and expenses. To carry both the Alternative Eyewear and Plan B Eyewear collections. Your Inquiry will be held in the highest confidence. Please contact Paul Storace at (888) 399-7742 or [email protected]. ________________________ VISION + $499.00 Comprehensive software at a reasonable price. Point-of-Sale Software, Inventory Control, Automatic order pricing, Patient Invoicing, Marketing Tools, Sales Reports, Demographics Ability to submit orders electronically to various labs (519) 749-0374 MSF Computing Inc. | The Opticians Association of Canada | www.visionplus.cc VISION | sep_oct | 2008 55 | classified ads | _vis11-8:8 13/11/08 09:04 Page 56 ✍ | PLEASE NOTE | __________________________ ________________________ __________________________ | EQUIPMENT | Sales professional needed Calgary, Alberta - Eyelogic Systems Inc. is seeking a Client Sales Representative to grow the optician market across Canada. Competitive salary, commission, and benefits. Highly motivated individuals possessing excellent inter-personal and organization skills should fax résumés to (403) 264-9740 or e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ Our classified ad section is a free service for all optical practitioners, in the canadian optical industry. All submitted classified ads will be included on the Breton Communications Web site : www.bretoncom.com/classified PLEASE SEND YOUR CLASSIFIED AD BEFORE DECEMBER 18TH, 2008 TO: c/o Vision Magazine Breton Communications Inc. 495 St-Martin Blvd. West, #202 Laval, Quebec H7M 1Y9 Fax: (450) 629-6044 E-mail: [email protected] |Advertisers Index| 20/20 Marketing _________27 Allergan ________________11 Bausch & Lomb__________15 Blanchard Laboratories ____9 briot/Weco ______________49 Canadian Optical Supply Co. __________37, 53 Centennial _____________39 Chantilli _________________6 CIBA Vision _______________ __________Inside Back Cover CooperVision ______13, 31, 51 DeluxEyewear____False Cover Sales Representatives Required: Optika Eyewear, Canada’s leader in high fashion, quality eyewear, known for Soho, Mizyake, and Oscar de La Renta eyewear is seeking experienced sales representatives for Ontario. Candidates must be highly motivated and have strong within the connections optical industry. Compensation packages are excellent. Agents are welcome to apply. Please fax résumé to (514) 334-0354 or e-mail at [email protected] or visit www.optikaeyewear.com. Jai Kudo ________________20 JF Rey__________________43 Johnson & Johnson________7 KIO Yamato _____________33 Luxottica __Inside Front Cover Mezmereyes ____________26 Mido ___________________17 Modular Design __________21 Nikon Optical Canada_____19 OAC ___________________45 Opal Optical ____________48 Plan “B” Eyewear _Back Cover Ronor __________________25 The Optical Group _______50 Topcon Canada __________32 VCOS __________________38 Venus Eye Design _________5 Viva International Group __47 Wescan ___________3, 28, 29 Zig Eyewear _____________41 Sales Representatives Required – Tek Canada Optical is seeking experienced sales representatives to sell Internationally recognized Da Vinci Roma Eyewear, Spicy Eyes by Da Vinci and other company products in Canada. You may review our web site at www.tekoptical.com for further information on our company and products. Agents are welcome to apply. Please fax résumé to (519) 652-5008 or e-mail to [email protected]. Sales Representative Wanted An Ontario based distributor of fashion forward competitively priced frames requires a highly motivated sales person to manage customer relations with our existing customers, develop the area of Northern and Western Ontario. We guarantee a salary, high minimum commission and travelling allowance. Please e-mail your résumé to [email protected]. ________________________ Sears Optical is looking for fantastic opticians for Ottawa and Belleville, Ontario. If you have a passion for customer service, teamwork, attentive to detail and having fun you are the persons we are looking for. Interested candidates can fax their résumé to (513) 492-5240 or e-mail to [email protected]. ________________________ Spectacle has expanded to a third location. We are currently looking for professional, career driven opticians to join our growing team at both our uptown & downtown locations. Enjoy helping upscale clientele, flexible hours, excellent pay all within a fun, friendly team oriented environment. Please forward résumés (Opticians position in the subject line) to [email protected] or fax to (416) 603-7284. ________________________ Toronto, Ontario. Optometry Office. A new, full-scope optometric practice in midToronto requires a pleasant, outgoing Optical Dispenser. Please call (416) 305-6467. ________________________ Are you opening a new store? if you are, then I have some beautiful wooden cabinet displays available. There are eight units available - like new. These units have solid wooden bases with rods attached to them and lights on the top part. The base part is a two-door cabinet that opens to some cupboards. The price per unit is $2,500 each but all eight pieces are available for $9,000. Pictures are available. e-mail me at Please [email protected] or call Arthur Kochberg at (416) 633-9365 or (416) 529-0336. ________________________ Auto Refractor. Nikon Speed1 Auto Refractor for immediate sale. Made in Japan. Looks like new. Seldom to use. $5,000. Call Michael or Leo (604) 439-7868 or e-mail: [email protected]. ________________________ Brand new OD Equipment for sale: • Reichert Advantage Chair • Reichert Illuminated Diale Phoropter with cyl • XCEL 250 Slitlamp • SifiMAV Vision Tester • Trial lens Set in Case • Universal Trail Frame • Perkin II Applan Tonometer • Indirect Ophthalmoscope head set • Examiner Stool with backseat • Guiden BV15 B16 Prism Bar Set • Huvitz Autolensmeter • Reichert RK 600 AutoRefractor / Keratometer Call (778) 389-3937 or e-mail [email protected]. I can send you pictures if interested. ________________________ Equipment for sale: Pre-Owned Essilor Gamma Patternless Edger and Tracer/Blocker for sale very good condition $10,500 or best offer. Pictures available. Contact: Matt at [email protected]. ________________________ For sale: three pieces of quality equipment for one low price, all in excellent working condition. A Nikon NR-5100 autorefractor with a printout for the findings; a B&L keratometer which is a work horse and will last for years; a Topcon minus cylinder phoropter which easily fits on a stand. All this equipment for $6,000. Pictures available. Please e-mail me at [email protected] or call Arthur Kochberg at (416) 633-9365 or (416) 529-0336. Price is too high? Let's talk. ________________________ For sale: B&L Keratometer, SER No: GH4261 white colour, good condition. Asking for $600 O.B.O. Please call Patrick at Eye Shades Optical (604) 438-8788 or e-mail [email protected]. ________________________ Slitlamp for sale: Older model but in good working condition comes with height adjustable table. Asking $500 CND or B/O, you have to pick up in St. Catherines, ON. Call Ramsey at (905) 641-5288. ________________________ OPTICIANS ASSOCIATION OF CANADA To become a member of the Opticians Association of Canada and take advantage of its many membership benefits please call 1-800-847-3155 • [email protected] OPTICIANS ASSOCIATION OF CANADA : 2706-83 Garry Street, Winnipeg, Manitoba, R3C 4J9 • www.opticians.ca 56 VISION | sep_oct | 2008 | The Opticians Association of Canada | 67_vis09-8:8 04/09/08 09:02 Page 1 05_vis09-8:8 04/09/08 16:29 Page 1
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