I want to have it done, but i guess the worst case scenario just scares me. Anyone know of any cases that have gone bad?
Do you really want to go down that road?
http://news.legalexaminer.com/former-airline-pilot.aspx?googleid=26902
Former Airline Pilot Awarded $4 Million in Case Involving LASIK Surgery
In the largest personal injury verdict to date involving "LASIK" eye surgery, an Arizona jury awarded a former United Airlines pilot $4 million for injuries he sustained due to the procedure. Steve Post, 35, underwent laser-eye surgery in May 2000 to correct nearsightedness. While on a test run two weeks before he was to return to work, Post experienced night glare. Doctors told Post that his night vision had been damaged, likely due to the LASIK surgery three months earlier. After losing his job because of his injuries, Post filed suit against University Physicians, Inc, alleging he was the victim of improper screening by his optometrist. The unprecedented case saw one of the nation's leading LASIK surgeons, Jeffrey Machat, testify on behalf of the plaintiff.
http://www.lasikfraud.com/news/archives/000029.html
REFRACTIVE SURGERY NEWS
Pilot's $4 million Award Over LASIK Surgery is Reinstated
By Anne Denogean
Tucson Citizen
A man whose career as a commercial pilot was ended by a LASIK eye operation should get a $4 million judgment, a judge ruled.
The Superior Court judge reinstated a $4 million judgment against University Physicians Healthcare - formerly University Physicians Inc. - in the case of former United Airlines pilot
Steve Post, whose night vision was reduced by the eye surgery.
With interest, the judgment is now at $4.3 million, the largest verdict in a LASIK case in the United States.
Laser-Assisted In Situ Keratomileusis is intended to eliminate or reduce dependency on eyeglasses or contacts.
Post successfully claimed in his lawsuit in May 2002 that his large pupils made him an inappropriate candidate for such surgery and that proper screening and pupil measurement by UPI would have revealed this before his surgery. His surgery was performed at UPI's The LASIK Center, 655 N. Alvernon Way.
Post's loss of night vision left him unable to fly for commercial airlines. He said during trial he would not have had the surgery had he been told he was at increased risk for night vision problems.
Judge Kenneth Lee granted UPI's motion for a new trial when Post's expert witness, Dr. Jeffery Machat, a Canadian ophthalmologist, recanted testimony that UPI had fallen below the standard of care in performing LASIK on Post.
The Arizona Court of Appeals overturned the ruling in January, and the Arizona Supreme Court declined to review it this summer.
Lee ruled to reinstate the verdict late last week.
"I'm really disappointed and we're considering our options," said Norm Botsford, president and chief executive of UPI.
Posted by Admin at November 2, 2004 05:42 PM