Neda,
I thought your comment warranted its own discussion. I appreciate your comments as it is great to get information from an optometrist. Your comments don't surprise me in regards to
Lenscrafters, but I'm a bit more surprised to hear that
Costco does this as well. Based on my experience at the two places, Lenscrafters definitely seems much more like an assembly line. A very smooth running one at that. I was able to get an appointment easily the same day, and there were multiple optometrists seeing patients simultaneously. I did feel they were trying to upsell the "optiscan" instead of doing a normal pupil dilation. The second time I went there, they also seemed to be pushing the
Featherwates Complete lenses which are very pricey.
With Costco, there was just the one optometrist and I had to make an appointment a few days in advance. I didn't try to just walk in at the store, so perhaps they squeeze people in who just show up at Costco. It also had a little bit more of a feel that the optometrist was separate from the eyeglass counter. Perhaps that is just an illusion though. I didn't feel the optometrist at Costco was pushy at all with regards to the glasses. Also, there aren't as many options at Costco, as the
anti-relfective lenses aren't that much more expensive. The only other option I can think of would be a
transitions type of lens.
It makes sense that the optometrists try to see as many patients as possible, but I doubt that is much different in a private practice. Also, I would expect a private practice optometrist to also be motivated to "upsell" their products.
I found your comment about eye dilation interesting. At Lenscrafters, they really pushed to get the Optiscan which is a decent upcharge. My insurance (and I'm guessing most others) didn't cover it. They did a pupil dilation the second time I went to Lenscrafters when I declined the Optiscan. Insurance did cover the dilation. When I saw the eye doctor at Costco, she didn't dilate my eyes and didn't even ask about doing it. You are probably correct that this allows her to see more patients as she probably doesn't make that much additional money from the dilation compared to the extra time it takes.
I found a local private optometrist who takes my insurance, so I'm thinking of going there this year for my eye exam. I'll see how much the experience differs from the Lenscrafters and Costco.
I really appreciate you taking the time to post your thoughts. Thank you very much.