I selected three stars 1) because the Fichman Eye Center front desk woman was extraordinarily nice to me when I told her I'd like to be reimbursed by the Fichman Eye Center for my necessary visit to a different ophthalmologist for a second opinion (my insurance only covers one eye doctor visit per year, so I had to pay out of pocket).
Before asking for the reimbursement, it was of course necessary for me to confirm that, beyond having not been examined by an actual eye doctor at the Fichman Eye Center, my expressed concern (that I had an astigmatism) had been ignored. (Every part of the exam was done by the technician; all the doctor did, when I finally saw him after the technician's exam, was sit very importantly at his desk while writing the prescription based on the technician's notes.) I asked for a copy of my sign-in sheet, and yes, there it was, the note I'd written on the line asking the reason for my visit: "Blurred vision in right eye / astigmatism / need glasses."
I… also asked for a copy of the prescription the technician (when it really comes down to it) wrote. The prescription that, once turned into lenses, resulted in my still having blurred vision in my right eye (which led to the second opinion).
I was told I'd have to get that from a man in the Optical department. I sat at his desk and he tapped around on his keyboard, then printed and handed me the prescription.
"Can you explain to me what all this means?" I said.
He put his finger on each number and said one indicated a correction for one eye and another for the other.
"And where's the correction for an astigmatism?" I said.
"There isn't one," he said (impatiently, I thought).
"Oh," I said. "Because I came in for an astigmatism. And the doctor I just saw for a second opinion gave me a prescription to correct an astigmatism."
"You can go to five different eye doctors - and I'm saying this as someone who gives eye exams - and get five different prescriptions. They're all right. None of them are wrong."
[The Fichman Eye Center might have received four stars for their response to my dissatisfaction if not for the dubious claim that all prescriptions are correct. This brought them down to two.]
"Really!" I said. "It's a wonder anyone gets glasses that actually work."
"Every doctor will find something different," he said.
"But I didn't even see the doctor," I said. "And when I told the technician I saw double at a distance - after she told me I only really needed a prescription for reading - she seemed surprised. I wrote 'astigmatism' on my form."
He then said what basically amounted to "Look, bothersome person, I'm just the glasses center guy."
Anyway, after being dismissed by Glasses Center Guy, I returned to the front desk with my prescription and my "astigmatism" notes and asked again for a reimbursement. The office manager was consulted, and I was told I'd get a call from someone in billing about how the reimbursement would happen. When she called less than an hour later while I was looking at sweaters in Marshall's (no luck, there), she told me, "We don't reimburse for second opinions with different doctors. You could have returned to the Fichman Eye Center for a second opinion and it would have cost nothing. But it was your choice to see another doctor."
I didn't ask why on earth I would go back to see the same doctor who didn't deign to examine me the first time. Instead I said something like, "But I didn't see any doctor at all the first time."
"It shows here that he did see you and signed off on the prescription."
"Yes, he did technically see me. I sat in his office and he stayed at his desk. He never looked at my eyes."
Unlike the second doctor - located on Center Street in Manchester - who did her own exam after the technician's exam and easily found not only the astigmatism I told her I had (yay for listening!), but also that I had mild dry-eye in one eye, along with some other thing I can't pronounce that she found "very interesting" (and not in a "you're going to die" way).
"Well, that's something I'll bring to him," she said, referring to the un-exam by the Fichman doctor, "but as to the reimbursement..."
(No reimbursement, she said, but she would void my appointment, essentially, with my insurance company so that I could then go to the doctor who *did* examine me and have them resubmit my bill to insurance, and I could then ask for a reimbursement from them. I'm overjoyed by the extra work I'm required to do as a consequence of an incomplete exam! Extra star!)
I also give them three stars for 2) allowing me, after my initial visit, to cancel the glasses order I placed and refund what I paid for them after I decided in the middle of the night the same day I ordered them that they were all wrong. I appreciate that very much. I do recommend Fichman Eye Center if you want a refund.
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