Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Former ophthalmology nurse here (oncology now). You've never seen a nasty azz eye infection that threatens blindness from a contact. No way would I do it
The majority of eye infections I've seen were caused by poor hygiene.
Anonymous wrote:Former ophthalmology nurse here (oncology now). You've never seen a nasty azz eye infection that threatens blindness from a contact. No way would I do it
Anonymous wrote:Former ophthalmology nurse here (oncology now). You've never seen a nasty azz eye infection that threatens blindness from a contact. No way would I do it
Anonymous wrote:I wear my dailies for at least a week, every single one. I've been doing it for many years. Never had an eye infection. If they start getting blurry or the edges get ragged I put in a new one. I always take them out when I sleep and put them in saline solution.
Anonymous wrote:I wear my dailies for at least a week, every single one. I've been doing it for many years. Never had an eye infection. If they start getting blurry or the edges get ragged I put in a new one. I always take them out when I sleep and put them in saline solution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like a good way to get an eye infection.
I’d recommend that you learn to just make do with your glasses. I can no longer wear contacts, and it’s a nuisance at times but doable.
It’s a bit hard to swim and go on a boat while wearing glasses and I am literally blind without them.
I don’t understand why dailies are more likely to cause ingestion vs monthlies which I used to wear and simply cleaned with solution.
Anonymous wrote:It’s not fine but not because of infection, primarily; I assume you’d make some token gesture toward sanitation.
The daily disposables are made of far less robust material than other types. The edges degrade—you will be able to see that they become ragged and it will hurt like you’re putting cornflakes in your eyes.
I’d plan to wear glasses if you need them.