
Mobile Clinic Manager Niki Myers (right) stands with a patient who was finally able to see again with her new glasses.
After the devastating storms that plagued the South in late April, VSP Mobile Eyes set its sights on helping the affected residents see clearly again. A disaster response team of VSP employees headed to Tuscaloosa, AL, where hundreds of homes were destroyed. Our fully equipped, 45-foot mobile eye exam clinic, Eyenstein, enabled us, in partnership with students and doctors from the University of Alabama Optometry School (UAB) and VSP network doctors, to provide free eye exams and eyewear to those who lost or had their glasses broken during the tornadoes.
We set up at the Red Cross shelter in Tuscaloosa and coordinated with the UAB to provide services. Each day proved to be busier than the last. With four portable exam stations in addition to the mobile clinic, we were able to help 79 patients in one day, with a seven-day total of more than 400 patients!
Some of the patients had prescriptions so strong they literally could not see right in front of them without glasses and had to feel around them with their arms and hands. Can you imagine not being able to see after a tornado devastated your town? It reiterates the importance of VSP’s disaster response services.
To help keep up with the high volume of patients, UAB provided two to three doctors per day as well as fourth-year students to assist with pre-testing, paperwork and patient flow in the lab. Many VSP providers volunteered their time and services as well.
The scene in Tuscaloosa was heart wrenching, but it was also inspiring to see how a community comes together in times of need. On almost every corner, neighbors were providing food, water or whatever supplies were available to help each other. Bess the Book Bus, a mobile literacy program that VSP is a sponsor of, also eased children’s minds when she visited the shelter one day to read to them and hand out free books.
The team is now on its way to Pratt City, Ala., where it will set up at the local Red Cross shelter.















