Matt,
You stated "FAA still not okay with bifocal contacts and always avoid
monovision". I understand the prohibition on monovision, but is AOPA
wrong about the following (lifted from their web page)? I am not
considering surgery at all, just the potential use of multifocal
contact lenses.
Tom
FAA approves
multi-focus contacts, intraocular lenses
The FAA has just approved the use of multi-focus contact lenses and
multi-focus intraocular lenses for pilots.
"You can fly with these lenses now, as long as your vision is
normal," said Gary Crump, AOPA director of medical certification. "You
just need an FAA eye evaluation form completed by your eye-care
specialist. Give that to your AME at the time of your next medical
certification exam." (The form
and more information are available on AOPA Online.)
Intraocular lenses are implanted in the eye to replace the natural
lens, usually because of cataracts. Monofocal lenses are set at one
distance (far, intermediate, or reading), meaning the patient still has
to wear glasses. Multi-focus lenses allow the patient to see things
clearly at different distances without having to use glasses.
Multifocal contact lenses offer the same advantages to pilots who
need vision correction over multiple distances. Progressive contact
lenses, for example, can allow a pilot to clearly see charts, the
instrument panel, and far distances without using glasses.
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