Home Outcomes
The numbers, audited.
Every January we publish the previous year's outcomes, audited by an external ophthalmic statistician. No clinic has to do this. That's rather the point.
The people behind the percentages.

Asha's first morning
Twenty-two years of reaching for glasses before reaching for anything else. Then a Tuesday when the ceiling had edges.
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Beyond the laser's reach
A prescription too strong for LASIK, corrected with an implanted lens. "I can see the alarm clock. I have never seen the alarm clock."
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Stars, at seventy-one
"The surgeon asked what I wanted back. I said the Milky Way. He didn't laugh, which is why I chose him."
Read the full story →What the numbers mean.
"20/25 or better" is measured, not asked
Next-morning acuity is read off the chart at your day-1 check by an optometrist who doesn't report to the surgeon. Self-reported satisfaction is a different (higher) number; we publish both.
The denominator includes everyone
Every eye we operated is in the data — including the hard cases other clinics refer to us. No exclusions for "complex anatomy," no survivorship editing.
One in five scans ends in "no"
The strongest number in this report is the surgeries we didn't do. Thin corneas, unstable prescriptions, dry-eye disease — 19.6% of scanned patients were declined or deferred in 2025.