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How Ophthalmology Practices Can Save Staff Time and Maintain Personal Care

If you run a multi-surgeon ophthalmology practice, you probably know the tension well. You need your team to move efficiently through a packed schedule. But your cataract patients need real guidance before they walk through the door. Those two things are not always easy to reconcile.

The answer is not to cut patient education. It is time to rethink who delivers it, and when.

The Staff Time Problem That Will Not Go Away

According to the American Society of Ophthalmic Administrators (ASOA), staffing has become one of the most discussed operational challenges in ophthalmology practice management. Technicians and patient coordinators often do double duty: managing clinical prep while fielding the same pre-surgical questions from anxious, unprepared patients.

“What is a cataract?” “Will I be awake?” “Why does one lens cost more?” “Do I need the laser?” Your staff answers these questions dozens of times every week. And while each one of those conversations matters to the patient, it takes time and energy from your multi-functional staff to address each concern.

When your highest-cost staff members spend a significant portion of their day on repetitive education calls, you are leaving efficiency on the table. And when burnout follows, you face turnover costs that compound everything else.

Why You Cannot Simply Cut Patient Education

Here is what makes this problem hard to solve: you cannot eliminate patient education and expect good outcomes.

With an aging population driving case volume higher every year, the patients arriving at your practice are increasingly encountering ophthalmology for the first time. They have never heard of a premium intraocular lens. They do not know the difference between laser-assisted and traditional surgery. And they are nervous.

Patients who arrive at their consultation without foundational knowledge take longer in your exam lane. They are more likely to postpone a decision, more likely to no-show, and more likely to default to the standard lens option, not because it is the right choice for them, but because uncertainty makes people cautious. Education is not a nicety. It is a clinical and business necessity.

The Hidden Cost of Handling It In-House

Most practices try to manage patient education internally. That is understandable. It feels like the responsible choice. But the model breaks down quickly in a growing multi-surgeon practice.

There is no consistency. Whether a patient gets a thorough preparation call or a rushed two-minute conversation depends on who happens to answer the phone that day. Staff turnover means constant retraining. Busy seasons mean education gets pushed down the priority list when the schedule fills up.

The result is an uneven patient experience across your surgeons and locations, higher no-show rates, inconsistent premium IOL adoption, and a staff that is stretched too thin to do its best work. For a practice accountable to EBITDA growth and board-level reporting, that inconsistency is more than an inconvenience. It is a revenue problem.

A Better Model: Human-Led Education

The solution is not automation. Replacing human contact with a video library or a chatbot does not solve the anxiety problem. Cataract patients, many of whom are older adults navigating a significant medical decision for the first time, want to talk to a real person. They want to feel heard. They want unhurried, plain-English answers.

What leading practices are finding is that a third-party patient navigator service, staffed by trained humans who connect with patients between scheduling and consultation, delivers the education patients need without burdening your internal team.

At Navigate, our Patient Navigators reach out to cataract patients by phone, text, or video after a consultation is booked. They explain the procedure in plain language, walk through the lens options your practice offers, address cost concerns without sales pressure, and answer every question the patient was too rushed or too nervous to ask in clinic. Afterward, they share what they learned with your team so the appointment starts from a position of trust, not from scratch.

In 2025, 74% of Navigate-educated patients book surgery. 35% choose a premium IOL, and Navigate-educated patients are 30% more likely to choose an advanced technology lens compared to patients who received practice-only education. That gap is almost entirely an education problem, and it is solvable.

What This Frees Up Inside Your Practice

When pre-visit education is handled before the patient arrives, your staff gets their time back. Technicians focus on clinical preparation. Patient coordinators manage scheduling and follow-up instead of fielding the same phone call for the hundredth time. Your surgeons walk into consultations knowing patients are ready for a real conversation about their vision goals.

For a practice with 5 to 15 surgeons operating across multiple locations, this kind of standardization changes the game. You get consistent patient preparation regardless of location, surgeon, or which staff member is on shift. You get measurable data on patient readiness and conversion outcomes. And you get a patient experience that scales with your growth rather than degrading under it.

Reducing the repetitive tasks your team carries out every day is one of the most direct levers you can pull. Every no-show represents a real cost in OR time, anesthesia prep, and unrecoverable staff hours. Every patient who chooses a standard lens when a premium option would better serve them is a missed outcome and a missed revenue opportunity.

 

Efficiency and Personal Care Are Not Opposites

The most efficient thing you can do for your patients is make sure they feel genuinely informed and cared for before they walk in the door. The most efficient thing you can do for your staff is make sure they are doing work that actually requires their skill, their training, and their presence.

Getting there does not mean doing more internally. It means being thoughtful about where the work happens and who is best equipped to do it.

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