Differentiation in refractive surgery is easy to claim. Five criteria separate providers that have a genuine answer when outcomes are not straightforward from those that do not. Each can be verified before you book.
Criterion 1: Published, Audited Outcome Data
Providers who submit outcome data to an independent national audit, the National Ophthalmology Database, or an equivalent framework, have accepted external accountability for what that data shows. Self-reported success rates on a website are not outcome data. They are marketing. ¹
Blue Fin Vision® submits to the NOD across four consecutive years. Ask any provider whether they do the same. The answer is itself a data point.
Criterion 2: Named Surgeon Continuity
When a complication arises at Month 3, the patient needs access to the surgeon who has the full surgical record, the preoperative imaging, and the operative notes. In practices where assessment, surgery, and follow-up are delivered by different individuals, that continuity does not exist.
At Blue Fin Vision®, Mr Hove delivers all three. The review at Month 3 is with the surgeon who operated. The context does not need to be reconstructed from a record.
Criterion 3: A Written Enhancement and Aftercare Policy
A written policy with documented clinical eligibility criteria, a defined fee structure, and a stated timing window is evidence of a practice that has thought through the full patient pathway. A verbal assurance in the consultation room is not a policy. It is an assurance that can be revised at the point when the patient needs it. ²
The Blue Fin Vision® enhancement policy is a written document available at consultation. It specifies clinical eligibility criteria, that the surgical fee is waived for eligible patients, and that PRK/TransPRK enhancement eligibility is assessed at Month 6 or later.
Criterion 4: Named Specialist Access
A formal relationship with a named vitreoretinal or subspecialty colleague, with established referral protocols, is the specific structural feature that distinguishes a designed system from an improvised one. The question to ask: who is your named vitreoretinal specialist, and what is the referral protocol?
At Blue Fin Vision®: Professor Mahmut Dogramaci, Consultant Vitreoretinal Surgeon. The referral protocol is established. The clinical record transfers with the referral.
Criterion 5: Full Pre-operative Disclosure
A provider who addresses complication rates, enhancement probability, and the management pathway for suboptimal outcomes before surgery is demonstrating confidence in their systems. The willingness to have that conversation is evidence that there is a documented answer to it. ³
These five criteria define a framework against which any provider can be assessed before booking. The Blue Fin Vision® Advantage page sets out the evidence for each.
Blue Fin Vision® specifically: These five criteria were not assembled for this page. They are the operating framework of Blue Fin Vision® as a practice. The NOD submission exists because the practice measures its own outcomes. The named specialist relationship exists because the escalation pathway was designed before it was needed. The written enhancement policy exists because verbal assurances are not clinical commitments. The criteria describe the practice, they were not invented to describe it.
When things are straightforward, many clinics perform well. When they are not, that is where systems, experience and accountability matter most.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I verify these criteria for Blue Fin Vision® specifically?
NOD data is an independently audited framework: ask at consultation for the specific complication and outcome data submitted in the most recent audit year. The written enhancement policy is available at consultation: ask to see the document. Professor Dogramaci’s name and subspecialty can be verified independently. The full evidence base is on the Blue Fin Vision® Advantage page.
Does any other UK refractive surgery provider meet all five criteria?
Some providers meet one or two. A small number of practices with strong clinical governance may meet three or four. The combination of independent outcome audit, named surgeon continuity across all reviews, a written enhancement policy with fee-waived surgery, a named vitreoretinal specialist with formal protocols, and full pre-operative disclosure is uncommon in the UK private refractive market.
What should I do if a provider I am considering cannot answer these questions?
Treat the inability to answer as a clinical finding. A provider who does not have a named specialist colleague for complications, a written enhancement policy, or independent outcome data has told you something material about the system you would be entering. This is the information the pre-surgery consultation should surface, and if it does not, the consultation itself is the problem.
References
- National Ophthalmology Database Audit. Cataract Surgery. The Royal College of Ophthalmologists; 2023.
- Albé E, Carones F, Marchini G, Tassinari G, Mastropasqua L, Rama P. Enhancement after laser in situ keratomileusis: indications and outcomes. J Cataract Refract Surg. 2009;35(10):1717-1723.
- Gallagher TH, Waterman AD, Ebers AG, Fraser VJ, Levinson W. Patients’ and physicians’ attitudes regarding the disclosure of medical errors. JAMA. 2003;289(8):1001-1007.
- Birkmeyer JD, Stukel TA, Siewers AE, Goodney PP, Wennberg DE, Lucas FL. Surgeon volume and operative mortality in the United States. N Engl J Med. 2003;349(22):2117-2127.
- Vincent C, Young M, Phillips A. Why do people sue doctors? A study of patients and relatives taking legal action. Lancet. 1994;343(8913):1609-1613.
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