This provider serves patients in BRUNSWICK and surrounding areas in GA.
Contact this surgery center for service area details
This ambulatory surgery center serves patients in the surrounding area. Contact this surgery center directly to confirm service availability in your specific location.
Absolutely unprofessional office. They give conflicting information over the phone vs in office. My mother had an appointment at 9am, was told to be prepared to wait 2 hours. Still sitting here 4 hours later. They didn't even take her back until 2 hours past her appointment time. The receptionist was rude. They had 10 families stuffed in their waiting room all for that same appointment time. I have never seen overbooking like this. Completely greedy and a lack of compassion.
As I remember he and his team does a great job. It's been many years in my left eye, he had this scrape it.\n And put lens in Very good people
Dr. Price is very easy going. Easy to talk to and he listens and does his best to explain the process. Referrals are not fast.
I had cataract surgery on January 19 in the Brunswick. Dr. Imhoff and his staff were amazing. They calmed my fears! I would highly recommend them. Below is my Facebook post the day after surgery with little about my story. Ronda’s Ramblings Today I was able to do something that I don’t think I’ve ever done before. What may seem mundane to you was wonderful to me. I could tell the time on the clock without scooting to the edge of the bed, leaning close, and squinting. When I Was in third grade,my teacher discovered that I needed an eye exam. Even sitting in the front of the row, I could not see the chalkboard (back when we used chalk). Showing my age here. When copying was required, sweet Miss Miller would pull a seat up even closer. I was a shy and very conscientious student. She kindly helped me without embarrassing me. After the exam, I returned several days later to get that first, life-changing pair of specs. I will never forget when the staff opened the back door. Oh my. What in the world? I saw a bird on a power line. What? And I saw trees with leaves. Actual, individual leaves. It was a whole new world to me. We have all seen kid’s drawings of trees with a tall trunk topped by green, cloud like toppers. Well, that’s what I thought trees really looked like! And I don’t think I knew that birds stopped on power lines because I had never seen it. Honestly, I’m not sure when my vision deteriorated. Maybe I couldn’t see before then and I just adapted. Maybe having to read from a distance exceeded the limitations of my impaired vision. From then on, I have always been totally depended on corrective lens of some sort. I started wearing contacts in junior high. I usually put my glasses on in the dark to go to the bathroom at night. Sometimes, laying in bed in the dark, I feel like I can hear better with them on. I have never,ever even considered attempting to drive without glasses or contacts. As my prescription changed a little almost every year, I remember once asking if I would go blind, a real concern for me. The optometrist assured me that my eyes would level off around the age of eighteen. Once my glasses broke and I had to wear my glasses for a while with masking tape holding them together. Places advertised one hour glasses, but my strength always had to be special ordered. The same for my contacts. My prescription has remained between a -7.5 and -8.5 as an adult. I have no idea what my vision is, but I once asked based on 20/20 being ideal. Mine was 20/400. I remember once in middle school, I attempted to water ski. Daddy kept yelling at me to grab the rope! What rope? I could t even tell who he was except by voice recognition. With other boats in the lake, I couldn’t even identify which boat was ours, much less find the rope. Let just say that was my first and last attempt at water skiing. To really show my age, my first, middle school contact lenses were expensive. I wore the same pair for a year, carefully cleaning and sanitizing in a unit nightly that actually brought the solution to a high temperature for proper sanitation. Monday, I had cataract surgery. The doctor said I could wait, but due to the severity of my vision, I was encouraged to go ahead. His exact words were that the procedure would be life changing. I didn’t sleep much the night before as I was apprehensive and excited. A little like waiting to have a baby….worried about the procedure but so optimistic about the life changing event to come. Although I am not superstitious, it was reassuring to read my fortune cookie from our Chinese food Sunday night. It read “When you awaken tomorrow, solutions to your problems will become clear!”. It made me smile. And now I can read my clock! After my follow up today, even without corrective lens and before right eye surgery, the doctor said legally I could drive. In the words of the old hymn, I was “blind but now I see!”.
As a retired neurologist with early cataracts, I was apprehensive about having cataract surgery. I had worked with Dr. Johnson professionally over the years and decided to have him do the job.I could not be more pleased with the outcome! We decided on a blend of two Panoptix multifical lenses. My vision in now 20/20 at all distances and I no longer require reading glasses. As a physician, I was admittedly not the best patient however all my concerns were thoughtfully addressed by Dr. Johnson. He’s recommended without reservation.
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