centers for disease control and prevention
How Can I Find Help Financially for Glaucoma?
Question by Patoo: How can I find help financially for glaucoma?
Best answer:
Answer by **Anti-PeTA**
Financial Assistance and Vision Care Resources
What would you like to learn about today?
The organizations and resources listed below are available for your reference. Except for Prevent Blindness America’s affiliates and divisions, the organizations listed are not affiliated with Prevent Blindness America, nor does their inclusion imply endorsement of their goods or services by Prevent Blindness America.
Request a free copy
of our Financial Assistance
Information sheet
Prevent Blindness America programs and services in your state
1-800-331-2020
www.preventblindness.org/about/affiliates.html
Prevent Blindness America affiliates provide a variety of adult and children’s programs that may be able to help you get the eye care you need.
American Academy of Ophthalmology
(415) 561-8500
www.aao.org
Sponsors several public service projects in conjunction with the Knights Templar Eye Foundation, under the umbrella name of EyeCare America (see below).
American Optometric Association
(800) 365-2219
www.infantsee.org
www.aoa.org
Sponsors InfantSee and Vision USA. InfantSee: member optometrists provide a comprehensive infant eye assessment within the first year of life as a no cost public health service. Vision USA provides free eye care to uninsured, low-income, working Americans and their families. Patients cannot have had an eye examination in the past 24 months. Applications may be obtained on the AOA website.
Association of Schools and Colleges of Optometry
(301) 231-5944
www.opted.org
Many optometry schools offer low-cost care to people willing to be treated by supervised students. They may also provide free care to people who join research studies.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services
7500 Security Blvd.
Baltimore, MD 21244-1850
(877) 267-2323
www.cms.hhs.gov
Visit the website, call or write with questions that cannot be answered by your local Social Security office.
Eldercare Locator
(800) 677-1116
www.eldercare.gov
information about community resources for seniors, such as financial, legal, transportation, and housing matters.
EyeCare America
1-800-222-EYES (3937)
www.eyecareamerica.org
If you are 65 and older, a US citizens or legal resident, have not seen an ophthalmologist in 3+ years and do not belong to an HMO or the VA, you may qualify for an eye exam and treatment at no out-of-pocket cost.
Free Health Clinics
www.freeclinic.net
clinics nationwide that provide free or discounted health care.
Hill-Burton Program
(800) 638-0742
www.hrsa.gov/osp/dfcr
Facilities participating in this program are required to provide a specific amount of free or below cost health care to persons unable to pay.
Lions Clubs International
(800) 747-4448
www.lionsclubs.org
provides financial assistance to individuals for eye care through local
clubs. Check your telephone book for the telephone number and address of a local club.
Medicare Benefits and Your Eyes
www.preventblindness.org
lists of resource links about the new Medicare prescription drug program
National Association of Area Agencies on Aging
(202) 296-8130
www.n4a.org
represents all Area Agencies on Aging, addressing concerns of older Americans in the U.S.
National Eye Institute
(301) 496-5248
www.nei.nih.gov
The federal government’s principal agency for conducting and supporting vision research. Provides publications on eye diseases and information on current eye research.
New Eyes for the Needy
(973) 376-4903
provides vouchers for new eyeglasses for those with financial need with no other resources, public or private, to pay for glasses.
Office of Minority Resources
(800) 444-6472
www.omhrc.gov
provides information on various health programs.
Patient Advocate Foundation’s Co-Pay Relief
www.copays.org
provides co-payment assistance for pharmaceutical products to insured Americans who financially and medically qualify.
The Medicine Program
(573) 996-7300
www.themedicineprogram.com
assists individuals of all ages nationwide with limited funds to pay for prescription medicine.
NeedyMeds, Inc.
www.needymeds.com
assists individuals of all ages nationwide with limited funds to pay for prescription medicine.
Partnership for Prescription Assistance
(888) 477-2669
www.pparx.org
assists individuals of all ages nationwide with limited funds to pay for prescription medicine.
Salvation Army
(800) 725-2769
www.salvationarmy.org
Provides medical services for those in need. Local chapters may provide eye care assistance.
Sight for Students, a Vision Service Plan (VSP)
(888) 290-4964
www.sightforstudents.org
Contact your local Prevent Blindness America affiliate for more details about this children’s eyecare program.
REGIONAL RESOURCES
The following online directories contain useful information about eye care and low vision resources.
Northern California
Coping with Sight Loss in Northen California
Ohio
Vision Resources and Services for Older Ohioans
Tennessee
Living with Sight Loss in Tennessee
What do you think? Answer below!
Baltimore Rehab – http://baltimorerehab.org Discover how to choose the best Baltimore Rehab and Drug Rehab Center. This decision could be the most important one you can make i…
Johns Hopkins HIV/AIDS experts receive more than million grants for training
Filed under: drug treatment centers in baltimore
HIV/AIDS experts at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and the university's Bloomberg School of Public Health have been awarded the grants by the Fogarty International Center's HIV Research Training Program. The award will be spread over …
Read more on ABC2 News
DAYBREAK DAILY: McAuliffe to put assets into a blind trust
Filed under: drug treatment centers in baltimore
SPLASH: Coming soon, apparently, per the Baltimore Sun, “After months of hints and half-denials, Michael Phelps has re-entered the drug testing pool for international competition, the strongest signal yet that he's planning a return to swimming …
Read more on WJLA
NIH announces new co-chairs of Panel on Antiretroviral Guidelines
Filed under: drug treatment centers in baltimore
The panel, a working group of the NIH Office of AIDS Research Advisory Committee (OARAC), consists of approximately 40 representatives from NIH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Health Resources …
Read more on National Institutes of Health (press release)
Transitional-aged youth and substance use: Teenaged addicts come of age
Filed under: drug treatment centers in baltimore
Listen to our podcast interview with Timothy Wilens, MD, Director of Substance Abuse Services and Pediatric Psychopharmacology and Director of the Center for Addiction Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who provides tips from Mass …
Read more on ModernMedicine
Recent Posts
- R&P: Name a Song That Speaks to You of Experience, Strength, or Hope?
- Addiction Help: Conformity Is Not a Cure
- Cirque Lodge Alcohol and Drug Rehab Center
- Narconon Releases Studies – 40 Years Evidence of Recovery
- Alcohol Addiction Treatment, Drug Addiction Treatment Centers (Ep.1)
- Help Me Understand Drug Addictions?
- Now That (Ms. My Sh*T Dont Stink!) Paris Hilton Going to Jail (Country Club Jail at That)?
- Why Choose a Christian Residential Rehab Center in Georgia?
- Anxiety and Depression , HELP?
- Is a Drug Addiction All Mental??
- Locals Voice Mixed Reactions to Legalizing Medical Marijuana in South Carolina
- Non-Opioid Medications by Mel Pohl, MD, FASAM of Las Vegas Recovery Center
- Is It Right for California to Declare War on Arizona?