February 08, 2017
1 min read
Save

AOA urges FTC not to adopt proposed changes to Contact Lens Rule

You've successfully added to your alerts. You will receive an email when new content is published.

Click Here to Manage Email Alerts

We were unable to process your request. Please try again later. If you continue to have this issue please contact customerservice@slackinc.com.

Andrea P. Thau

The American Optometric Association urged the Federal Trade Commission not to adopt proposed new changes to the Contact Lens Rule ordering doctors to obtain written acknowledgement from patients that they received a copy of their contact lens prescription, doctors to maintain each signed acknowledgment for at least 3 years, and that doctors be subject to FTC inspection of the records of authorizations, according to a letter dated January 30, 2017, by Andrea P. Thau, OD, president of the AOA.

“Congress imposed very specific requirements with respect to making contact lens prescriptions available to patients,” Thau wrote. “At the same time, it excluded from the Fairness to Contact Lens Consumers Act (FCLCA) any of the requirements that the FTC now proposes to impose. Thus, the AOA believes the FTC may now attempt to upset that balance by adding requirements through rulemaking beyond what Congress included in the FCLCA.”

Requiring a signed acknowledgement of receipt of a contact lens prescription would be, “overly burdensome to physicians who are already struggling to keep pace with ever-changing regulatory requirements,” Thau continued.

It currently costs optometrists approximately $46,921,798 annually to comply with the Contact Lens Rule, and the new requirement would cause an additional cost burden, she wrote.

“Having had the opportunity to review the complaints that the Commission has received regarding compliance with the Contact Lens Rule over the past 5 years, the AOA believes the Commission’s patient acknowledgement proposal would not directly address the majority of complaints received,” Thau added.

The AOA also supports exploring whether a dedicated email address would be beneficial for receiving complaints related to the rule. “Having a more direct method by which to report these retailers would be beneficial,” Thau wrote.

She urged the FTC to withdraw the proposed rule as written.

Source: www.aoa.org