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Can You Be A Surgeon With Glasses

Are there any certain physical requirements or qualifications you need to be a surgeon? Because my anatomy teacher says you need to have things like perfect vision, good stamina, and a capacity to see blood. What’s bothering me is that I wear glasses, my stamina isn’t great, and I feel faint when I see blood sometimes. However, I really want to study medicine. Is there anything I can do?

Physical requirements to be a surgeon?

Are there any certain physical requirements or qualifications you need to be a surgeon? Because my anatomy teacher says you need to have things like perfect vision, good stamina, and a capacity to see blood. What’s bothering me is that I wear glasses, my stamina isn’t great, and I feel faint when I see blood sometimes. However, I really want to study medicine. Is there anything I can do?

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Levo

Full Member
Joined Dec 16, 2016 Messages 183 Reaction score 301

Perfect vision is not essential. Surgeons can wear glasses in the OR, and in surgical specialties where you use assistive devices to see what you’re doing like surgical loupes or microscopes, I’m sure those devices can be adjusted to whatever degree of correction you need. As far as feeling faint when you see blood, that’s something you get used to. It’s not uncommon for med students to pass out and hit the floor (better that than falling into the surgical field!) their first time in the OR. Many of those still end up becoming surgeons, OB-gyns etc. It’s all a matter of desensitization, as well as taking simple precautions like going into the OR well fed and well hydrated, not locking your knees when you stand, etc.

Physical endurance does play a big role. You stand in one place and hold sometimes uncomfortable positions for hours at a time. This is particularly true in orthopedic surgery, where trainees (medical students and residents) often have to stand there holding heavy limbs while the attending operates, sometimes for hours.

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Don’t feel like you have to have this question figured out before deciding if you want to study medicine. If you end up going to medical school and deciding you enjoy the OR environment and do well in it, then great! If you go to medical school and discover that you don’t, you can always bite the bullet and suffer through the total of 3-4 months of surgical specialties you are required to do in med school, then go into a field where you never have to see the inside of an OR again. I was one of those people who went into medical school thinking “surgery or bust,” then discovered that I just wasn’t cut out for it. I’m starting residency in an non-surgical field of medicine in a few weeks, and I regret nothing.

Why doesn’t my ophthalmologist undergo surgery if they wear glasses?

Can You Be A Surgeon With Glasses

Many ophthalmologists with refractive errors (myopia, hyperopia or astigmatism) opt to keep their prescription and, therefore, use glasses or contact lenses. It is not surprising that one the questions we get asked over and over again is why they do not undergo surgery using any of the different refractive surgery techniques (laser surgery or intraocular lens implantation) as this would allow them to rely
less on glasses, especially those ophthalmologists who work in this very speciality.

Many ophthalmologists continue to wear glasses in the same way that not all plastic surgeons have gone under the knife.

Although there are many ophthalmologists who have undergone surgery, others may not have done so for any of the following reasons:

1. Incompatibility: not all ophthalmologists are eligible patients as they do not meet the requirements for refractive surgery. The technique where the intraocular lenses areeplaced requires there to be a space within the eye, while in the application of laser techniques a certain corneal thickness is also necessary that not all people have.

2. Lack of aesthetic reasons, since the reasons for refractive surgery are not curative. There are people (and ophthalmologists) who do not mind glasses, or even like to wear them as a fashion accessory. Laser techniques polish the cornea to change its curvature (the myopic eye is larger than normal, while the hyperopic eye is flatter), so this intervention has more to do with comfort, aesthetics, practicing sports or other specific professional activities that make wearing glasses uncomfortable. In this sense, many ophthalmologists do not have a special interest, in the same way that not all plastic surgeons surgeons have gone under the knife.

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3. Maintaining myopia can be an advantage, depending on a person’s, profession and hobbies. When short-sighted people who wear glasses take them off for a while they have spectacular near-range vision. For this reason, when many people with myopia wake up at night and pick up their mobile phone in the dark without their glasses on, they bring the device very close to their face because it heps them to see the screen better. Under normal conditions, this would be impossible without the glasses, especially around 45 years when presbyopia sets in. For this reason, many short-sighted people whose working life requires near vision find their refractive defect to be advantageous and ophthalmologists can be an example of this: At eye examinations it is possible to see how the specialist, –if they are short-sighted– removes their glasses to examine us closely with a higher quality of vision. Outside the healthcare field, the same happens to professionals who work with small pieces and very close vision, such as jewelers. In fact, this is one of the reasons why many patients are not good candidates for surgery.

There are also other ophthalmologists who have undergone refractive surgery to reduce their prescription. For many professionals, due to their lifestyle, personal circumstances and preferences, the surgery is worthwhile and also has multiple benefits.

Doctor José Lamarca, ophthalmologist in the areas of Cornea and Ocular surface, Refractive Surgery and Cataracts at the Barraquer Ophthalmology Centre.

Maddie Otto
Maddie Otto

Maddie is a second-year medical student at the University of Notre Dame in Sydney and one of Level Medicine’s workshop project managers. Prior to studying medicine, she worked and studied as a musician in Melbourne. She has a background in community arts, which combined her love for both the arts and disability support. She is an advocate for intersectional gender equity, and is passionate about accessibility and inclusive practice within the healthcare system.

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