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Transcript of interview with Dr. John Shepherd by Lisa Gioia-Acres, November 21, 2008

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2008-11-21

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Dr. John Richard Shepherd shares the background of his early life in southern Illinois, his father's and grandfather's occupations, and his educational journey through college and medical school. His army experiences in Chicago and Alabama convinced him and his wife to look for a warm dry climate in which to live, and they relocated to Las Vegas in 1968. Dr. Shepherd recalls the businesses and housing surrounding Sunrise Hospital, the difficulties getting his specialty listed in the phone book, and renting his first office space from Nate Adelson. He also describes taking out a loan to install ophthalmology equipment, hiring an office manager with medical accounting experience, and doing cataract surgery in a way that basically hadn't changed for decades. The passing of the Medicare bill back in 1966 caused Dr. Shepherd's practice to build up quickly. He details the many ways eye surgery changed, including the invention of the intraocular lens and the phacoemulsification procedure. He mentions his and Dr. Shearing's contributions to ophthalmology — better designed lenses and surgical techniques - which they taught to other doctors from all over the country. Dr. Shepherd discusses radial keratotomy, which was a precursor to laser and later LASIK surgery, and describes a lens implant technique he learned in Russia from Dr. Fyodorov. He goes on to share anecdotes and stories of his interactions with patients, his travels as a consultant and as a surgical teacher for Project Orbis, and meeting Fidel Castro. He speaks candidly about his successes and his failures as well. Dr. Shepherd retired in 2006 and immediately enrolled in a Master's program and earned a degree in military history. After a long and distinguished career, after receiving many accolades and awards, he and his wife are enjoying life, splitting their time between Sun Valley, Idaho, and Las Vegas.

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OH_01690_book

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OH-01690
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Shepherd, John Interview, 2008 November 21. OH-01690. [Transcript.] Oral History Research Center, Special Collections & Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada.

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An Interview with Dr. John Shepherd An Orn] History Conducted by Lisa Gioia-Acres Heart to Heart Oral History Project Oral History Research Center at UNLV University Libraries University of Nevada Las Vegas ©Heart to Heart Oral History Project University of Nevada Las Vegas, 2009 Produced by: The Oral History Research Center at UNLV - University Libraries Directory: Claytee D. White Editor: Gloria Homol Transcriber: Kristin Hicks Interviewers: Emily Powers, Lisa Gioria-Acres, Claytee D. White •I I• These recorded interviews and transcripts have been made possible through the generosity of Dr. Harold Boyer and the Boyer Foundation. The Oral History Research Center enabled students and staff to work together with community members to generate this selection of first-person narratives. Participants in the Heart to Heart Oral History Project thank the university for the support given that allowed an idea of researching early health care in Las Vegas the opportunity to flourish. All transcripts received minimal editing that included the elimination of fragments, false starts and repetitions in order to enhance the researcher's understanding of the material. All measures have been taken to preserve the style and language of the narrator. In several cases, photographic images accompany the collection and have been included in the bound edition of the interview. Claytee D. White, Project Director Director, Oral History Research Center University of Nevada Las Vegas - University Libraries Table of Contents Growing up in Harrisburg, Illinois; father and grandfather's occupations; extensive educational background; grandfather's history; internship at Illinois Central Hospital; three years at Northwestern Program of Ophthalmology; two years in the Army; describing grandfather's work compared to his; background on coming to Las Vegas (1968) 1-3 Setting up practice next to Sunrise Hospital; mention of Von Tobel's Lumberyard, Wonder World, and Boulevard Mall; meeting Nate Adelson; recalling expenses involved in purchasing equipment; discussion of revolutionary changes in ophthalmology; description of Dr. Kelman's techniques in cataract surgery; studying phacoemulsification and intraocular lens implantation with Dr. Shearing; description of method of inserting silicone lenses 4-8 Short history of doctoring in Las Vegas; mention of construction of Hilton Hotel and foreign bodies in workers' eyes; discussion of laser surgery, radial keratotomy, and LASIK; learning from Dr. Fyodorov in Russia; conducting Operation Cataract every spring in Las Vegas; anecdotes about patients and colleagues 9-13 Travel as a consultant; teaching surgery on a converted DC-9 with Project Orbis in Cuba, Syria, and Jamaica; meeting Fidel Castro; successes and failures over the years; discussion of awards and recognitions, including the Yahn Wurst Medal; mention of working on stars like Andy Williams and Cher; opinions on the future of eye care and having insurance pay for LASIK 14-18 Recalling fees in early days of practice; anecdote regarding Joe Gerschio and overcharge; mention of colleagues Jose Videll, Dr. Simon (first retinal surgeon in Las Vegas), and Dr. Leslie Sulper; brief referral to children and their accomplishments; retiring and selling practice in 2006; earning master of arts in military history; joining the Historical Society, writing, and spending time in Sun Valley, Idaho; one last anecdote concerning early practice, the Yellow Pages, and Elko, Nevada 19-23 iv Preface Dr. John Richard Shepherd shares the background of his early life in southern Illinois, his father's and grandfather's occupations, and his educational journey through college and medical school. His army experiences in Chicago and Alabama convinced him and his wife to look for a warm dry climate in which to live, and they relocated to Las Vegas in 1968. Dr. Shepherd recalls the businesses and housing surrounding Sunrise Hospital, the difficulties getting his specialty listed in the phone book, and renting his first office space from Nate Adelson. He also describes taking out a loan to install ophthalmology equipment, hiring an office manager with medical accounting experience, and doing cataract surgery in a way that basically hadn't changed for decades. The passing of the Medicare bill back in 1966 caused Dr. Shepherd's practice to build up quickly. He details the many ways eye surgery changed, including the invention of the intraocular lens and the phacoemulsification procedure. He mentions his and Dr. Shearing's contributions to ophthalmology — better designed lenses and surgical techniques - which they taught to other doctors from all over the country. Dr. Shepherd discusses radial keratotomy, which was a precursor to laser and later LASIK surgery, and describes a lens implant technique he learned in Russia from Dr. Fyodorov. He goes on to share anecdotes and stories of his interactions with patients, his travels as a consultant and as a surgical teacher for Project Orbis, and meeting Fidel Castro. He speaks candidly about his successes and his failures as well. Dr. Shepherd retired in 2006 and immediately enrolled in a Master's program and earned a degree in military history. After a long and distinguished career, after receiving many accolades and awards, he and his wife are enjoying life, splitting their time between Sun Valley, Idaho, and Las Vegas. v 1 This is Lisa Gioia-Acres. Today is November 21st, 2008. I'm here in the home of Dr. John Shepherd conducting an oral history interview for the Heart to Heart project at the university. Hi, Dr. Shepherd. Thank you so much for having me here. You're welcome. We're going to kind of start out talking about your early life, but before yon begin I have two questions. First, could you tell me what your full name is and spell your last name for me? It's John Richard Shepherd, S-H-E-P-H-E-R-D. Dr. Shepherd, what kind of a doctor are you? I m an ophthalmologist. I do eye surgery. Will you tell me a little bit about your early life, where you grew up and maybe a little bit about your parental history? I grew up in a small town in southern Illinois, Harrisburg, Illinois. My father was the manager of a coal company. My grandfather had been an optometrist. I went to school at the University of Illinois and Southern Illinois University. I graduated in '58 with a major in chemistry. And then I went to University of Illinois Medical School and I graduated in '62. I interned in Chicago, did my residency in ophthalmology there and then spent two years in the army. Can you tell me a little bit about your grandfather's life as a doctor of ophthalmology? Well, my grandfather was a really interesting character. My grandfather was born in 1866 and education probably was not beyond the eighth grade. He worked as a section hand on a railroad. He worked as a lumberman and he worked in a coal mine. In the coal mine he was what's called a blaster. Back in the early days, black powder days, the miners would all dig into the face of the coal and then they'd set the charges. All the miners would leave except the blaster, who would set off the charge. And it was very dangerous. His pay was double time plus funeral expenses. So one day he set off a charge and the roof caved in and broke his ankle, crushed his ankle. And in those days you had to spend a lot of time in traction, you know, on your back. And while he was recuperating from that, his brother, who was a gunsmith of all things, taught him how to fit eyeglasses. So he became a fitter of eyeglasses back at the turn of the century. 2 How did his brother know how to do that? I don t know how he learned. At any rate, when they licensed optometry in Illinois around 1910 or something, he took an examination and passed. So he was an optometrist. He never had an office. He would practice in rural parts of the state. It was like Appalachia down there, very mountainous and hilly, mostly populated by refugees from the South after the Civil War. He would leave town on Monday and stay at somebody's farmhouse and he'd fit them with the glasses. Then he would travel to the next place, and on Friday or Saturday he'd come home and spend the weekend at home. So he did that right up until he died at age 82. What was your grandfather's name? Daniel Shepherd. As a child how influenced were you by the work that he did? Actually, I wasn't. I knew he fitted eyeglasses. But I really had no particular desire to do that or even be a doctor at an early age. I remember him doing it and everybody knew Doc Shepherd. With rural people he was sort of legendary where everybody knew him. He also did real estate. He sold real estate. You know, in a situation like that he knew all that was happening, what the farm prices were doing and all. So he also sold real estate. He had really quite an empire of different farms and homes and all when the Depression hit and then he really lost everything in 1929. But he continued working and he did fine. But he lost all of his property and all. He was an interesting man. Did you go with him at all on any of his house calls or anything like that? No, I never went with him on his house calls. He used to take me out in the country to go fishing. You know, he knew everybody. So we'd stop at gas stations and meet the people and all. So where did you go to high school? In Harrisburg, Illinois. And at that time what did you think that you were going to do with your life after graduation? I really had no idea. My father wanted me to be a doctor. So I signed up for premed when I went to University of Illinois. I toyed with the idea of going into law, but I never did. When I got accepted to medical school, I went ahead - medical school I didn't particularly - I didn't like 3 medical school. I decided I had probably made a mistake, but I decided to finish it anyway and then do something else. After my junior year — we had to take an elective and go to school in the summer. That was the first time we had to go year-round. And I took ophthalmology since I didn't like anything else. It turned out I really liked ophthalmology, so I decided to specialize in that. How long did you stay in Illinois after graduation? I didn't. As soon as - well, I interned there. I graduated in '62. I interned there one year at the Illinois Central Hospital. Then I spent three years at the Northwestern Program of Ophthalmology, which was at the Hines Illinois Veterans' Administration. And as soon as I finished there I went into the army for two years, '66, right when Vietnam was starting. I spent two years in the service in Alabama the whole time. It was a good experience. I went to a base that had never had an ophthalmologist. So I actually built the ophthalmology and optometry center there. The optometrist worked under me and I did surgery there. At this particular time in your life did you see any differences or comparisons between the kind of medicine that you were practicing versus what your grandfather did? Oh, yeah. My grandfather just fitted eyeglasses. He didn't do any medical work. I had a great uncle who was a doctor. He was 90 when I was a child. In fact, those are his drug cases in there. He said he retired because the pharmacists couldn't fill his prescriptions anymore. He was trying such old chemicals that no one knew what they were. So I could tell it had changed a heck of a lot since then. Interesting. Well then, let's talk about how you got yourself to Las Vegas. Well, when I was in the army - first of all, I trained in Chicago, which was 400 miles north of where I grew up. And it was the coldest place in the world. My wife also grew up in Illinois. We got married right after my internship, but neither one of us wanted to stay in a cold climate. So I thought we might like the South better. But I spent two years in Alabama and I didn't like the humidity. So we started looking around. I picked out two places that I thought would be great to live. One was Las Vegas and the other was Portland, Oregon. I just had to go to Portland first. So six months before I got out of the service I flew out to Oregon and spent a week out there It 4 was dreary weather and cold and I decided I would be suicidal if I stayed there. So I flew down here. I had previously met Dr. Joe Videll. I don't know if you've interviewed Jose Videll or not, but he s been here longer than I have. He was a wonderful man. He had approached me about working for him, but since I told him I was going to Portland, he had hired someone else. When I got down here he encouraged me to stay anyway on my own, so I did. I set up practice just on my own here. What year did you get here? Sixty-eight. So when I set up practice, of course the town was really small. The county was a little over 200,000. The town was about 170,000 then. One of the optical companies told me that they d built a new hospital here. He said, well, not many people use it now, but ultimately it will be busy. And that was Sunrise Hospital. So when I came I opened an office right next door to Sunrise. As you know — I'm sure you go by it a hundred times a day ~ at that time it was four stories high. The building next to it that I was in is still standing but it's two stories higher now. It's right on the south side. And there wasn't anything between there and where this sports center is up heie now on Karen. That was Von Tobel's Lumberyard. Other than that there wasn't a thing south of there on that side of the street until you got right across from where the Boulevard Mall is now. And there was a Wonder World grocery store there. They were building the Boulevard Mall, but they hadn't opened it yet. So I rented a house behind the hospital, which we lived in for a short time. One thing that was really nice when we got here, we'd been shopping in the PX at the army post for a couple of years. And we went in Wonder World and saw that they had like ten different kinds of peanut butter and we thought we were in heaven. We couldn't believe all the different goods they had. Were your first couple of years shaky just because it was a small town and you were in such a specialized field? Well, not really. There were some problems. When I set up practice, the phone company screwed up and didn't put my specialty under my name in the phone book. Not only did I not get calls as an ophthalmologist, but I also got calls at night to deliver babies and all sorts of weird things. So 5 °°k s^x months get that name changed. But being next to the hospital there, doctors referred cases to me. And we had really a fast start. We did very well there. I had a very tiny office. When I came out here to visit I had to take my boards right before I got out of the army. I had to go to San Francisco and take my specialty boards. My wife met me here. We went around and I rented an office space next to Sunrise. The man at Sunrise was Nate Adelson. He was a wonderful man. He was one of the big owners. Teamsters I think had put up most of the money tor the hospital. But Nate was a wonderful guy to deal with. And he rented me this really tiny space. It was about 600 feet. I mean it was the smallest office I had ever seen. When we drove out here from Alabama it was supposed to be ready. I got out here with about two months' worth of money to live on and they hadn't even started the office. I got in there and there was still nothing in it. So I was really panicked. I went to the manager and he was sort of, oh, yeah, we'll do it. Then I went to Mr. Adelson and he was just adamant. He said get on it right away. And they had it done within about a week. It was just incredible. So I got a real favorable impression of the way people did business out here then. We were in that office for a couple of years and then 1 expanded. They built a third and fourth floor on the medical building. So I moved up there and took a much larger space. What kind of equipment did you come with? Was it expensive for you to get started? Yes, it was expensive. My ophthalmology equipment -- it's very expensive to set up an office. I mean in those days it was about $15,000 a room and I set up two rooms. Nowadays it would be more like a hundred thousand. So I had to borrow I think about $30,000. And I ordered the equipment. It was delivered here and installed once the office was open. I hired - I had one girl that worked for me, and that was it. Like most of us I had no idea how to run a medical practice. Luckily the lady I hired had worked in one before. So she brought some accounting systems and showed me and handled it all right. But I was in there up until 1989. In the meantime, ophthalmology had undergone a complete revolution. I don't think there's been a change like it since the world began. But when I trained we were doing cataract operations as the most common operation in ophthalmology. There were only about 160,000 of those operations done a year. Now days there are over two million done. But in that time there were only about 160,000. We were using the same procedure that had been described in about 6 1903, which was really a knockoff of one that had been described in 1750. So nothing had changed much except that we could suture the wound closed. But other than that, it really hadn't changed. And a couple ot changes took place. I don't know if you want all this or not. Absolutely. The biggest change was the instigation or the passing of the Medicare bill. Medicare was passed in 65. It took effect in '66. All of a sudden people that had cataracts could afford to get them done. And we weren't aware of that. I don't think a doctor that I knew of was in favor of Medicare. Almost all of them said we don't need this. You know, we had big charity hospitals and people who didn't have any money could go to the charity hospital. Well, when that law was passed, people came out ot the woodwork. They had cataracts. So the practice started building up really last. And when it did people started doing research on ways to improve the technique. I had started in '68. Around the early 70s a doctor by the name of Kelman from New York invented a technique that removed the cataract with an ultrasound by making a very small incision. Instead of taking the whole cataract, which is about the size of an M&M candy, he broke it up into pieces and could take it out through a very small incision. And that way the people could be ambulatory immediately. Prior to that, we used to keep people in bed for five to seven days. They couldn't move. They had to be real still, and then about three months later you fitted them with a real thick eyeglass that made them really look bug-eyed and restricted their side vision. So he came out with this technique called phacoemulsification. Dr. Kelman was sort of a self-promoter and made a lot of people mad, particularly very conservative people back east. And, luckily, Dr. Shearing had come to Las Vegas about six months after I did. I don't know if you've interviewed him. I think you're going to interview him if you haven't. He's a very interesting fellow. He and I took a course in phacoemulsification. Could you pronounce that a little slower? Yeah. I'll spell it for you. It's P-H-A-C-0 ~ emulsification ~ E-M-U-L-S-I-T-I-O-N (sic). So he and I took the course. And generally what happened in those days is a guy would take the course and then he'd come back and advertise it, which would make everybody mad in the community. So it would cause all sorts of fighting. But Shearing and I decided ~ and there were a couple of other guys who took the thing, too, at the same time ~ we decided we'd have no 7 publicity. We d just do it, you know. We wouldn't advertise it. We wouldn't tell anybody and try to toot our own horn or anything. And that worked really well. We didn't have any friction here. We were able to do it slowly, learn how to do it without upsetting a lot of people. Then about a year later, the second shoe fell. And that was the invention of intraocular lens. Instead ot having to fit people with this big thick glass, we could put a lens inside the eye, which is what we've done ever since. Well, that was another big thing. A lot of people, conservative groups, universities, they all said that it ~ they referred to it as a time bomb. They're going to lose their eyes, horrible. Well, again, Shearing and I got interested in it. So we went to Europe, which is where they were doing them. We spent a week in Holland - actually, two weeks in Holland with two different surgeons. And then we came back and started doing that. So the town was wonderful. We couldn't have done this anywhere else, or if we had we would have been sort of outcast. But here everybody supported it. The other ophthalmologists learned to do it. So we did it as a group. The lenses weren t the best in the world. And Shearing designed a lens that was really better than anybody else s back in 77. That was one of the most important things that happened in ophthalmology I think because it not only was a better lens, but also because you could put it through a smaller incision. It gave a big advantage to this phacoemulsification technique. So the two things sort of went along together. It took a long time. We were doing this back in the 70s. As late as '85 or '86, only 25 percent of the people in the country were doing this. So it took a long time to get it going. Now it's virtually « no one does anything but that. But at that time it was really new. How did you and Dr. Shearing fit research into your practice as well? Well, basically that way. Shearing got --1 don't know how he got the idea to do it. But I think he got it from seeing some work that had been done in Europe prior to that time. But a little later than that, a company came to me and wanted to know if I'd be interested in testing out a lens that they had, which was a silicone lens. No one seemed to be able to get this thing to work. The advantage of it was you could fold it and you could put it through even a smaller incision. The same size that you used to make a phacoemulsification, which was three millimeters, you could put this lens in. But no one seemed to be able to get it to stay because it 8 would break and float around in the eye. And, basically, they were just about to close the company. So I got started working. And I picked up a technique — this is a technical thing. I don't know it you re interested in this. But it was a technique where we'd tear the anterior capsule in a circle. And when you did that you could stretch it. It was like Saran Wrap. You could stretch it and it wouldnt break. If you cut it, which is the way people had been doing, it would rip. But if you did this circular tear, which I had picked up I forget where — I didn't invent it; I was just one of the earliest guys to use it ~ we could hold that soft lens in place. So that sort of was the second revolution that really helped. With that we had a course here in Las Vegas where people would come from all over the country and we taught them how to use this lens. A little later I devised a technique, which is still the preferred technique for removing the cataract, which was a method of making a couple of grooves in the lens and rotating them and breaking it into four pieces like a pizza pie and then removing each of those pieces rather than trying to do the whole thing. And that technique is still ~ I was honored last year at the American Cataract and Refractive Society. I was an honored guest there in recognition of that. So I was proud of that. But, again, all these things that Shearing did and I did and other people, it was facilitated by being in a town like Las Vegas. That raises a question. Why in Las Vegas was it so accepted? And why do you think it happened here and might not have been able to happen somewhere else? Well, you know, this was a wild town. One of the great things I liked about this town is that there wasn't any fixed society. Back in Chicago, for instance, when we still did cases in the hospital, you'd have to be able to get - the lowest guy on the totem pole would have to wait in line to get a patient in. And if you wanted to do something differently, the powers that be would just shut it down and say, oh, you can't, you're doing something that's unethical or we don't - it's unproven, you can't do it. None of that was true here. If you could do it, you could do it here. If you could imagine it, you could do it. Exactly. And we had a fairly - of course, this happened when the town was much smaller. So everybody knew all the doctors. Ultimately some infighting occurred as the town got larger and larger. We had the same disadvantage other cities did when it started getting large, you know. 9 But when it was small, everybody worked together well. When you first came to town, about how many ophthalmologists were there in town? I think there were about six. I think I was the seventh. Shearing was the eighth I believe. That's how big it was. And when I came to town -- you know, now the doctors - there's been a lot of terrible publicity about doctors in the paper in the last year for various things. That's sort of the way it was in Las Vegas in those days. Most ot the doctors when I came here, the older doctors ~ there was some really fine ones. I mean there were some superior doctors here. But a large number of them had come here either to get a divorce or because they'd gotten in trouble back where they were from. The level ot training was not real high here. And people would - there was a place called the Sansum Clinic, which I had never heard of. It was down in Santa Barbara. I mean I'm from the Midwest. I had heard of the eastern clinics and the Mayos. But around here everybody went to the Sansum Clinic whenever they got sick because they didn't trust the doctors here. There was one doctor I know that they had talked into coming down from Tonopah. It was I think during the war or before the war. And it was rumored that he really wasn't a medical doctor. He was a veterinarian. Now, it wasn't true. But the fact is that all the doctors thought it was true. I mean that's how funny it was in those days. But the year I came all of us were getting out of the army. The war was starting to wind down in Vietnam. And guys that served in Nellis all came here. You know, a lot of people right out ot training. So it became really a high-class group of people here when I started. What kind of eye problems did you see that were peculiar to Las Vegas and perhaps differed from what you saw back east? Well, the only thing I can say is I think I made a living the first year on taking foreign bodies out of people's eyes that worked on the Hilton hotel. They were building the International. And everybody got a speck of steel in their eye and they'd come over to the hospital. I mean I had never removed so many foreign bodies in my life. In fact, the builder there kids me. He says that he kept me in business all those years. There wasn't anything unique to this area, but there were things that we didn't see here. We did not see conditions called uveitis, or histoplasmosis, which was a very common condition •i 10 back in the Midwest. We never saw that. Can you describe those? Well, this was a disease that's prevalent in the Ohio and Mississippi River basin there. There are different types of bacteria and fungal diseases that flourish where the humidity is high. But you didn t have that out here. So unless someone moved here from somewhere, you wouldn't notice it. That was about it. 1 didn't see anything really unusual. What about the desert climate, the dry heat? You see people with dry eyes. People will complain of that a lot, but that's true everywhere. It's probably a little worse here. It's tougher on people who wear contact lenses out here, which may be one of the reasons we were able to use implants a lot. Prior to that, you'd fit cataract patients sometimes with contact lenses. But they had trouble wearing them here. So implants are different than, obviously, the laser surgery. Oh, yeah. Were implants kind of like the stepping-stone to laser surgery? No. They are not related, actually. The laser surgery came about ~ laser surgery changes the shape of the cornea, the clear part of the outside of the eye, which is the refracturing lens. So it's like grinding a lens to fit. The precursor to that was a procedure called radial keratotomy. That was invented by a Russian named Fyodorov. He would make incisions around the eye, not right in the eye but radiating out, almost all the way through the cornea. And that would flatten the cornea. The early ones were done with a broken razor blade — in this country, too — which sounds weird. But a razor blade ~ the old Gillette blue blade was the sharpest. No one could make a knife as sharp as that. So we had blade breakers we would attach and snap it off to make a sharp knife. And then you would put a stop on it to control how deep it went. That was a pretty crude procedure. And it's pretty well been abandoned, not so much in Russia but in most places. So they started trying to find a way to shape the eye without doing all this destruction. That's what the laser did. It would tend to carve almost a cell at a time to change the shape of it. And we originally did that on the front of the eye. We'd shape the front and then take a week or two to heal up. Then with LASIK you'd make an incision halfway through the cornea, lift the flap 11 up like that, you d grind the lens on the inside, lay the flap back down. A couple of hours later the patient felt fine. That's what LASIK is on that. So did you participate in all these different changes and evolutions? Yes. We did. Did all doctors do that? Not all doctors. Particularly refractive surgery, a lot of people didn't do refractive surgery at all. But we did. We got started doing that a lot. Then I also tested a lens -- first of all, I was a consultant tor Star Surgical after I had done this work with the soft lens. So I traveled all over the world for Star looking at technology and teaching and just looking at different technology in different countries. I spent some time in Russia and with Fyodorov. And he had another invention there, which just got approved actually about two years ago. And that was a lens that you put inside the eye, but you don't take the cataract out. This is for people that don't have a cataract, but they re too nearsighted to do LASIK on. You can open the eye and slip this lens. And it could be right on. And they can see with that. So I was the first one to do that in the country. And we tested that out for a number of years. It was just approved recently. I know this is a silly question. But with laser surgery, how come you still wear glasses? Oh well, that's a good question. To all my patients I always say, What do I want to see? But when you get old, if you've got perfect eyes, perfect vision, by the time you're 45 you can't see to read anymore. You've got to wear reading glasses. If you're nearsighted, which I am, you need glass for distance, but you can take them off and see up close without them. And to me that's more convenient. If I had my eyes fixed so that I could see distance without glasses, I didn't need them to read with. So the choice if I was 20 or 25 years old I'm sure I would have had it. But this thing came about when I was already wearing bifocals and they're just more convenient. So it wasn't fear? No. I did my daughter -- one of my daughters. The other daughter is too nearsighted to do it. But I did her. And my son subsequently had it done. So it's a good procedure. It's a safe procedure I think. The patients that you saw throughout your career here, how did insurance impact their ability to get a procedure done? Like in the early days was insurance available? 12 Well, for cataracts, yes, because most people that have cataracts are over 65. So they have Medicare, which is one of the reasons why there's so many cases done. If people could have it done, we d develop better ways of doing it. More people wanted it done. As a matter of fact now, it's not unusual to take the cataract operation -- the cataract being the lens of the eye which has gotten cloudy -- is if they don't have a cataract, but they want to see and they're not