Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley
Location:
Berkeley, CA
Phone:
510-642-1020
Mon: 8:00 am-7:00 pm
Tues - Thurs: 8:00 am-10:00 pm
Fri: 8:00 am-5:00 pm
Sat: 10:00 am-5:00 pm
Sun: 1:00 pm-10:00 pm

Information

Website:
General Information:
The Fong Optometry & Health Sciences Library, located in 490 Minor Hall, is one of the science branches of the Library of the University of California at Berkeley. The library supports the faculty, students, staff, research laboratories, and clinics of the University of California School of Optometry. Its staff and services also provide support for the varied and interdisciplinary information needs of the students, faculty and staff of the UCB-UCSF Joint Medical Program. The health sciences... (read more)
Flickr pictures by optcirc | Showing 3 photos with the tag optometry

LOST and FOUND

3 posts by 1 person. Updated on Apr 25, 2008 at 4:52 PM.

Request for Optometry Photos

1 post by 1 person. Updated on Apr 23, 2008 at 9:50 AM.

Attention OPTO 256 Students

1 post by 1 person. Updated on Apr 16, 2008 at 12:24 PM.
Displaying all 3 wall posts
William wrote at 1:28pm on April 17th, 2008
I love this Library. You can sometimes catch me crying in one of the rooms or watch me stare blankly at one of the walls during class time. =)
Mathew wrote at 9:13pm on April 14th, 2008
That's a really cute picture!
Dori wrote at 1:25pm on April 14th, 2008
what an attractive library!
Displaying all 7 posts.
 
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Jenna

Jenna wrote at 1:10pm on May 13

Care of the Eyes Demands Diligence

E. J. Stanley, 1901

The New York Times
By Nicholas Bakalar
Published: May 13, 2008

"READING in poor light, sitting too close to the TV, wearing the wrong prescription glasses and crossing your eyes — things your mother warned you would ruin your vision — are actually generally harmless. But a truly dangerous false belief is that there is nothing you can do to prevent the loss of vision.

According to Dr. Paul R. Lichter, a professor of ophthalmology and director of the Kellogg Eye Center at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, seeing an ophthalmologist regularly is essential, and not just to get a new pair of glasses. “In the way of preserving your sight,” he said, “it’s making sure you don’t have any hidden eye diseases.”

Dr. Lichter recommends an ophthalmologist’s examination before a child enters school, and if everything looks good at that point, then an exam every five years is enough. But it should be a thorough exam in which the doctor dilates the pupils and examines the optic nerve."

Click here to read more.
Jenna

Jenna wrote at 4:26pm on May 6

Google Books Beta in Melvyl

Optometry Books in Melvy/Googlebooks Screenshot

The UC Berkeley Science & Engineering Libraries News Blog
Published: April 25, 2008

"Links to books digitized by the University of California and other Google Books partners can now be found in Melvyl. Depending on the copyright status of the book, Google Books will return a full text view, a limited preview, a snippet, or a record view. In some cases, cover art is also shown.

More information on this and other scanning projects is available on the Frequently Asked Questions page."

Jenna

Jenna wrote at 12:01pm on April 24


As Economy Slows, So Do Laser Eye Surgeries

Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press

The New York Times
By Barnaby J. Feder
Published: April 24, 2008

"Call it the Lasik indicator. With the weak economy forcing consumers to cut back on discretionary spending, the number of laser vision-correction surgeries has been falling — as it did during the last recession.

More than 800,000 Americans underwent Lasik surgery in 2007, a slight increase from 2006. But the numbers started slumping along with the economy in the second half of last year. And industry analysts are now predicting a Lasik recession."

Click here to read more.
Heather

Heather wrote at 2:12pm on April 17

Hi Darlene!

Thanks for the comment on the new Opto Facebook page. We are so excited about it.

We just added a new application that will feature the weekly rotation of our new books which is updated every Friday.

Be sure to check back tomorrow!

Cheers!
Darlene

Darlene wrote at 1:57pm on April 17

This is a great page. I love it. Greetings from the Illinois College of Optometry.
Darlene G. Ward
Serials/Indexing Librarian
Imeri

Imeri wrote at 8:51pm on April 16

EyePAC sounds very interesting. I currently work in an Eye Hospital and would be grateful if could direct me to the actual Telemedicine website for it. Many thanks.

Dilly [Imeri]
Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley

Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley wrote at 3:34pm on April 16

Preventing Diabetic Blindness with EyePACS, A Low-cost Store-and-Forward Telemedicine System

Jorge Cuadros [Assistant Clinical Professor of Optometry, UC Berkeley]

eyepacs-web.jpg

February 6, 2008: 12:00pm - 1:00pm
Location: 290 Hearst Memorial Mining Building, the Maria & Dado Banatao Conference Room, UC Berkeley

Abstract:

"A pilot project to prevent diabetes-related blindness is being expanded across the state with a goal of serving 100 safety net clinics and 100,000 patients. Diabetic retinopathy is the leading cause of blindness among working age adults, with 24,000 people with diabetes becoming legally blind each year in the U.S. Early detection through annual screening and treatment of diabetic retinopathy can reduce vision loss by 90 percent. Remote assessment of diabetic retinopathy using telemedicine is an accurate and low-cost way to identify retinal lesions and facilitate appropriate and timely use of specialty care.
UC Berkeley Optometric Eye Center has developed EyePACS, a web-based clinical communication system that has been used successfully for DR screening in diverse clinical settings. The low cost and adaptability of the program is a demonstration of the design priniciples used to develop EyePACS. Ultimately, any California community clinic that wishes to provide store-and-forward telemedicine services should be able draw on this open-access program to create a low-cost, effective, and sustainable program."


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May 12

Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley updated its profile. It changed hours.

3:57pm
April 17

Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley added the My Flickr application.

9:49am

Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley added the Bookshare Books application.

9:37am
April 14

Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley added new photos to Library.

1:38pm
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Library - 3 Photos

Optometry & Health Sciences Library at UC Berkeley added the WorldCat application.

11:21am

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