That's utter nonsense. You will, however, struggle to reach the magical 6-digit income in this profession in spite of many years of experience.??! said:last time i looked it up it was about 100k-150k
Having seen all kinds of half-truths and utter nonsense being bandied about regarding Optometry, I would like to set the record straight. It is simply not good to be misled on potentially life-changing decisions. How do you know that I am not talking out of my proverbial? It is because Optometry was one of my possible career options and I researched that damn thing like hell and I mean it. I was offered a place to study Optometry, but with the knowledge I had on the profession, I had to reject the offer.
Things to carefully consider before doing Optometry:
- Although it is reported that Optometry graduate income is among the highest, you will meet your wage ceiling at about $70k on average, in 2-3 years as a salaried professional. Need proof, look at the ads at the OAA site and easily extrapolate a professional salary structure yourself.
- While there is a modest* clinical aspect to the job, it is by and large, still a strongly retail endeavour. Meaning, your employer will expect you to hard-sell branded spectacle-frames and coloured contact lenses whenever you can.
- Whether you are a salaried optom. or an owner, you will need volume to obtain a decent income in this profession. But have you seen the traffic to most optometry shops? It is a trickle compared to a regular pharmacy and spectacle frames are not controlled items like drugs, so, mark-ups are low and competition is increasingly high, esp from boutique spec shops and Myer. Like it or not, almost all of an optometrist's income, is derived from selling spectacle frames and contact lenses, not providing eye-treatments.
- If Optometry is that bad, why is it hard to get in? That's because of relatively low demand in the community, thus, little government funding for places for the miserly 3 optom schools. If places and schools are increased to the level of say, pharmacy (over 12 schools and growing), the ENTER 99 requirement will drop by a huge margin, possibly much lower than Pharmacy which hovers at between 93-97+.
- Lets get real, optometry IS NOT medicine. The eye doctors vehemently HATE optometrists because of a perceived turf encroachment (read its history at the OAA site) and in each fight, you can guess who loses. Witness the recent fiasco in Queensland over the struggle for optometrists to attain rights to prescribe drugs. With the eye doctors winning the state government ears through resignation threats, Queensland optometrists will not be prescribing drugs or expanding their professional role in the foreseeable future. Don't do Optometry for the possibility of learning/doing quasi-medicine.
- Optometry is NOT recognised as a legitimate health field in several developed countries, including Singapore (a 3-year Diploma course after Year 10 to qualify) and Hong Kong. They are also paid less than nurses in those countries. Hence, job prestige is certainly not applicable in those countries.
- For States where Optometrists can prescribe drugs for minor eye problems, realise that the prescriptions are not PBS subsidised. Meaning, patients pay the full price for drugs, and we all know what that causes. - Less visits to optometrists for eye problems thus, mooting the much hyped increased clinical roles of the optometrist.
- 5 years of study?? What the heck is that all about? Come on, what do these Schools think they are producing? Medical Doctors? Optometry is a second-tier profession in the health-field hierarchy. Optometry does NOT have surgery of any sort like dental training. Thus, Optometry is approaching overtraining for a limited job scope and whose forays into the eye-doc's territory have been very ignoble due to the invincible medical lobbying. Refracting, the cornerstone of optometry, is also performed by computers these days. Not very challenging, at the least.
- There was an article in Australian Doctor awhile back when Peter Costello, much to the anger of the AMA, released the earnings based on tax-returns of medical professionals (optometry was included - why - I can't say). While not dead-last in terms of gross earnings (psychiatry was the lowest), Optometrists, on average, have very significant overhead costs. Consequently, they make slightly over $60k, if I recall correctly and the lowest for actual income.
- Lastly, ever heard of orthoptists? You'd better. Their roles are almost similar and in nearly all instances, overlap those of optometrists. Entry to orthoptist courses is significantly easier (LaTrobe, and another uni ~ ENTER 79-85), the training is almost identical to Optometry and the average orthoptist salary is much lesser than an optometrist's at about $30k-$40k. Eye doctors use orthoptists as a strategic wedge between optometrists and themselves, and due to the AMA's influence, hospitals have a traditional aversion for optometrists and don't hire them. Instead, in almost every aspect of primary eye treatment, utilise orthoptists.
--
While I have done my best to present the downsides as accurately as possible, this list is not complete by any means. However, I can safely say that everything I have stated in here can be backed up with legitimate online and published material as well as anecdotal reports.
For most of you, try UMAT or GAMSAT again. Or lobby for a change for entry to medical schools. Or just do Pharmacy. It is more flexible than a specialist profession like Optometry and probably has more prospects.
Last edited: