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Makers of Contact Lenses:
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Popular Brands Info:
1-Day Acuvue
Acuvue
Acuvue 2
Acuvue 2 Colours
Acuvue Bifocals
Biomedics 55
Focus 1-2 Week Visitint
Focus Dailies
Focus Dailies Progressives
Focus Night & Day
Focus Progressives
Frequency 55 Multifocal
FreshLook ColorBlends
Optima FW/SofLens 38
SofLens 1-Day Disposables
SofLens 66 Toric

SofLens Multifocal

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Great deals going on now with Acuvue 2!


Contact Lens Rebate Expires on 12/31/05

Contact Lens Buyers, Beware...

Sorting help from hype in any media--the World Wide Web, television, or print--can pose a problem.

Remember: If a claim sounds too good to be true, it probably is.  Here are some recent examples of potential problems: 

Misleading pricing a few years earlier prompted consumer lawsuits against Bausch & Lomb for selling the same lens under three different names, at three different prices.

Buying mail-order contacts with no prescription calls for caution.  If your current lens has a 14-millimeter (mm) diameter and 8.7 base curve, and the mail-order company switches to another brand lens with a 14.0-mm diameter and 8.8 curve, it seems like it's about the same size and shape and should fit well. Maybe it will. But if the new brandis a different material, it may leave your eyes uncomfortable."

A misleading print ad for Acuvue contacts was corrected last year after an FDA warning. The ad showed a man and woman half indoors and half outdoors on a sunny beach--no protective eyewear. "Open your eyes to the UV around you," it stated. "And you'll be glad Acuvue contact lenses are introducing UV protection."

Writing to Vistakon Inc., of Johnson & Johnson Vision Products Inc., FDA warned: "The combination of this picture and the accompanying language implies that wearing the Acuvue UV-absorbing lens outside offers as much protection as one would naturally have indoors." Warnings in tiny print that the lenses were not substitutes for UV-absorbing eyewear did not "counteract the overall message" that the lenses provided full UV protection, the agency wrote. The company also corrected a similar TV ad.

Charges of false claims were settled by the Federal Trade Commission last November against J. Mason Hurt, O.D., of Bartlett, Tenn. Hurt had touted his Precise Corneal Molding orthokeratology treatment as a permanent cure for defective vision. A consent agreement prohibits Hurt from making further false claims and requires reliable scientific evidence for future claims.

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