Why Do Women Get Dry Eye More Often?

Women develop dry eye disease two to three times more often than men. The primary reasons are hormonal fluctuation across the reproductive lifespan, oestrogen, progesterone, and androgen changes at puberty, during pregnancy, on oral contraceptives, and at menopause. This is combined with a higher prevalence of autoimmune conditions that directly damage the lacrimal and meibomian glands. Most women wait years before receiving a correct diagnosis because dry eye is still widely misattributed to screen time, pollution, or ageing alone, explains Dr Shibal Bhartiya.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her approach focuses on identifying risk before damage is irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term. Emphasis on early detection, risk assessment, and continuity of care. She is rated 5 stars across 1,500+ patient reviews on Google.

Dry eye in women is not a minor inconvenience. It is a chronic, progressive ocular surface disease with documented links to autoimmune conditions, hormonal milestones, and inadequate medical recognition. Women who dismiss their symptoms or accept “it’s just dryness” as a complete answer are at risk of progressive corneal damage and deteriorating quality of life.


Why Women Are at Higher Risk: The Evidence

Hormones Drive Tear Film Biology

The tear film has three layers: aqueous, mucin, and lipid. All three are hormone-sensitive.

Oestrogen increases aqueous tear production at physiological levels but disrupts it when it drops sharply. Perimenopausal and postmenopausal women experience the steepest fall in oestrogen, which is why dry eye prevalence rises sharply after age 50.

Androgens are essential for meibomian gland function. The meibomian glands produce the lipid layer that prevents tear evaporation. Women have lower androgen levels than men throughout life, and androgen levels fall further at menopause. This makes women structurally more vulnerable to meibomian gland dysfunction, the most common cause of evaporative dry eye.

Oral contraceptives suppress androgen levels. Studies consistently show higher rates of dry eye in women using combined oral contraceptives compared to non-users. Contact lens discomfort and dry eye symptoms worsen during OCP use and often improve after stopping.

Pregnancy creates rapidly shifting hormonal states. Many women notice significant tear film changes during pregnancy and breastfeeding, including both dry eye and, paradoxically, temporary improvement in some pre-existing conditions.


Autoimmune Conditions: The Underrecognised Connection

Autoimmune diseases are three times more common in women than in men. Several of them directly attack the lacrimal glands, the meibomian glands, and the conjunctival goblet cells that produce mucin.

Sjögren’s Syndrome

Sjögren’s syndrome is the most important autoimmune cause of dry eye in women. It targets exocrine glands: primarily the lacrimal and salivary glands, causing severe aqueous-deficient dry eye and dry mouth.

Sjögren’s affects an estimated 0.5–1% of the population, with a 9:1 gender (F:M) ratio. Most patients are diagnosed in their 40s and 50s, but symptoms often begin a decade earlier. The average time from first symptom to diagnosis is 4–7 years. A delay that leads to corneal surface damage, infection risk, and preventable vision loss.

Signs that raise suspicion for Sjögren’s in a dry eye patient:

  • Severe aqueous-deficient dry eye not responding to standard lubricants
  • Associated dry mouth, difficulty swallowing, or recurrent dental caries
  • Parotid gland enlargement
  • Joint pain or fatigue without clear cause
  • Positive anti-SSA/Ro or anti-SSB/La antibodies

If Sjögren’s is suspected, referral to a rheumatologist is appropriate alongside ophthalmic management.

Rheumatoid Arthritis

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has a 3:1 female predominance. Dry eye occurs in 10–35% of RA patients due to lacrimal gland infiltration by inflammatory cells. Scleritis and peripheral ulcerative keratitis are both sight-threatening conditions, and also associated with RA. Both require an urgent specialist review.

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE)

SLE predominantly affects women of reproductive age. Dry eye is common in lupus, occurring through autoimmune lacrimal gland damage and secondary Sjögren’s overlap. Hydroxychloroquine, used to treat SLE, can cause retinal toxicity and requires regular retinal screening, a point often missed by rheumatologists managing these patients.

Thyroid Disease

Thyroid eye disease (TED), particularly Graves’ disease and Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, is 5–8 times more common in women. It also causes proptosis, exposure keratopathy, and severe dry eye through lagophthalmos. Even in the absence of overt TED, hypothyroid patients frequently report dry eye symptoms related to reduced tear production.


Life Stages When Dry Eye Worsens in Women

Life StageHormonal ChangeDry Eye Risk
Oral contraceptive useSuppressed androgensMeibomian gland dysfunction, contact lens intolerance
PregnancyOestrogen surge, then fallVariable; improvement or worsening
Postpartum / breastfeedingProlactin high, oestrogen lowDry eye common; often unrecognised
PerimenopauseOestrogen and androgen fluctuationSignificant dry eye onset or worsening
MenopauseSharp oestrogen and androgen fallHighest risk period; most common new presentation
Post-menopauseSustained low androgen and oestrogenChronic evaporative dry eye

The Pattern of Delayed Diagnosis in Women

Women with dry eye symptoms are more likely than men to be dismissed, undertreated, or given incomplete diagnoses. Several patterns repeat in clinical practice.

Screen time blamed by default. Digital eye strain causes dryness through reduced blink rate, but it does not cause chronic dry eye disease. When a menopausal woman with Sjögren’s is told to “use eye drops and take breaks from screens,” the underlying condition goes untreated.

Lubricant drops prescribed without investigation. Over-the-counter lubricants manage symptoms but do not address the cause. Meibomian gland dysfunction requires warm compresses, lid hygiene, omega-3 supplementation, and sometimes in-office procedures. Aqueous-deficient dry eye from Sjögren’s requires immunosuppressive management, not just lubricants.

Autoimmune investigation not initiated. Many women with dry eye are never asked about joint pain, dry mouth, fatigue, or rashes. The systemic connection between dry eye and autoimmune disease is systematically underinvestigated in routine eye care settings.

Menopausal symptoms normalised. Women are often told that dry eye is “just part of menopause” without being told that effective, targeted treatments exist.


What We Often Miss

The meibomian glands can be imaged directly. Meibography, infrared imaging of the eyelid glands, shows gland dropout, which is irreversible. In a woman presenting with dry eye at menopause, meibography identifies whether there is significant structural gland loss that will not respond to lubricants alone.

Tear film osmolarity measurement distinguishes dry eye severity more reliably than symptom scores. A value above 308 mOsm/L in either eye, or an inter-eye difference greater than 8 mOsm/L, is diagnostic of dry eye disease.

Corneal staining with fluorescein and lissamine green maps surface damage that is invisible to the patient until it is advanced. Women who have had dry eye for years without adequate treatment frequently show significant staining they were unaware of.


What to Expect from a Thorough Dry Eye Evaluation

A complete evaluation for dry eye in women should include:

History: Duration, severity, pattern of symptoms (worse in the morning vs evening), contact lens use, OCP or HRT use, menopausal status, autoimmune history, medications, thyroid history.

Examination: Visual acuity, slit-lamp assessment of lid margins and meibomian gland orifices, tear meniscus height, fluorescein tear break-up time, corneal and conjunctival staining.

Investigations (where indicated): Tear film osmolarity, meibography, Schirmer test, inflammatory markers (for autoimmune workup), thyroid function tests, ANA, anti-SSA/SSB.

Treatment options tailored to cause:

  • Meibomian gland dysfunction: warm compresses, lid massage, omega-3 fatty acids, tetracycline antibiotics, intense pulsed light therapy
  • Aqueous-deficient dry eye: preservative-free lubricants, cyclosporine eye drops, punctal plugs, autologous serum drops
  • Autoimmune-driven dry eye: systemic immunosuppression in collaboration with rheumatology
  • Hormonal dry eye: androgen eye drops (under investigation), HRT discussion with gynaecology for menopausal patients

When to See a Specialist

Seek specialist review without delay if you notice any of the following. Persistent burning, foreign body sensation, or visual fluctuation that has lasted more than three months. Dry eye symptoms alongside dry mouth, joint pain, fatigue, or rashes. Contact lens intolerance developing without clear cause. Increasing light sensitivity or eye redness. Any history of autoimmune disease with new onset eye discomfort. Symptoms worsening on oral contraceptives or at the time of menopause.


What This Means for You

Dry eye in women is frequently undertreated because it is frequently underevaluated. The hormonal and autoimmune drivers are real, documented, and manageable: but only if they are looked for. A woman with dry eye deserves a full diagnostic assessment, not a bottle of artificial tears and an instruction to blink more.

If your symptoms have been present for more than a few months, have not responded to lubricants, or are accompanied by any systemic symptoms, a structured review with a specialist who takes the full picture seriously is appropriate.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can hormonal changes cause dry eye?

Yes. Oestrogen, progesterone, and androgen fluctuations across the reproductive lifespan directly affect tear production and meibomian gland function. Dry eye is particularly common at perimenopause and menopause due to falling oestrogen and androgen levels.

Is dry eye a symptom of Sjögren’s syndrome?

Dry eye is the cardinal ocular feature of Sjögren’s syndrome. If dry eye is severe, fails to respond to standard lubricants, or is accompanied by dry mouth or systemic symptoms, Sjögren’s must be considered and investigated with blood tests and specialist referral.

Do oral contraceptive pills cause dry eye?

Combined oral contraceptives suppress androgen levels, which impairs meibomian gland function. Contact lens intolerance and dry eye symptoms are more common in OCP users. Symptoms often improve after stopping the pill.

Should I see an eye doctor or a rheumatologist for autoimmune dry eye?

Both. Autoimmune dry eye requires co-management. An ophthalmologist assesses and treats the ocular surface. A rheumatologist investigates and manages the systemic condition. The two must communicate, particularly for conditions like Sjögren’s, RA, and lupus.

Can dry eye damage my vision permanently?

Yes. Untreated severe dry eye causes corneal epithelial breakdown, scarring, and secondary infection. These changes can affect vision permanently. This is why dry eye should not be dismissed as a minor complaint, particularly in women with underlying autoimmune or hormonal risk factors.


Speak to a Specialist

If you have been told your dry eye is “just dryness” and it has not improved, a structured evaluation is the right next step. A second opinion from a specialist who will assess the full hormonal, autoimmune, and ocular picture gives you the clarity to make better decisions about your care.

📍 Dr Shibal Bhartiya — Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram 📞 +91 88826 38735 | 🌐 www.drshibalbhartiya.com


About the Author

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine. This article was updated in April 2026.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma management, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current Glaucoma Practice (Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision. Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

Access her work on PubmedGoogle ScholarResearchGate and ORCID.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya
Glaucoma • Second Opinion • Advanced Care

www.drshibalbhartiya.com
 +91 88826 38735

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

Upload your reports for a structured review.

If you are unable to come to Dr Bhartiya’s clinic: Read more about teleconsultation for glaucoma

Why Are Your Dry Eye Drops Not Working

Your eye drops could not be working because of preservatives in the drops, improper viscosity, or the excessive use of…

Glaucoma Second Opinion in Gurgaon

Glaucoma second opinions in Gurgaon focus on confirming diagnosis, reassessing risk, and ensuring the treatment plan is appropriate for long-term vision protection. With Dr Shibal Bhartiya, the goal is careful evaluation, not escalation, often refining than increasing treatment.

A glaucoma second opinion is essential when diagnosis is unclear, treatment is escalating, or vision feels different despite normal reports.

Dr Shibal Bhartiya is a fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator with over 25 years of experience. Her approach focuses on identifying risk before damage is irreversible, simplifying treatment decisions, and protecting vision long-term. Emphasis on early detection, risk assessment, and continuity of care. She is rated 5 stars across 1,500+ patient reviews on Google.

If you’re considering a glaucoma second opinion in Gurgaon, the goal isn’t more tests—it’s clearer understanding of risk, stability, and what actually needs to be done next.
A thoughtful review can distinguish true progression from noise, helping you avoid both over-treatment and missed change.

Glaucoma Second Opinion in Gurgaon: Clear Answers, Long-Term Vision Protection

Many people come for a glaucoma second opinion in Gurgaon and NCR (from across Delhi NCR; South Delhi, Faridabad, and Noida) not because something dramatic happened, but because something doesn’t feel clear

This page is designed as a patient education resource to help people understand when an independent glaucoma review may be useful. Many patients simply need reassurance and clarity rather than change in treatment.

If you’ve been told you have glaucoma, or might have it, and something doesn’t feel clear, this page is for you.

Why patients seek a second opinion:

• Diagnosis feels unclear
• Treatment is escalating
• Reports don’t match symptoms
• They want to avoid unnecessary intervention

A test result that was explained too quickly, or not at all. Drops started without explanation. Different doctors saying different things. “Watch and wait” without explaining the risk. Or simply the feeling that something important may be getting missed.

Glaucoma is not a disease of sudden events. It is a disease of small decisions repeated over years. And that is exactly why a thoughtful second opinion with a glaucoma specialist matters.

Known for her structured approach to glaucoma risk assessment and progression analysis, Dr Shibal Bhartiya provides trusted second opinions for patients seeking clarity before major treatment decisions. Both, in person, and online.

Why Glaucoma Needs Careful Re-Evaluation

Glaucoma is often called a silent disease. But what makes it truly difficult is something deeper:

Damage happens slowly, invisibly, and often irreversibly. Many patients see clearly on the chart and are told everything is fine. Yet subtle loss in contrast, low-light vision, reading comfort, or navigation confidence may already be happening.

Routine eye exams can miss glaucoma. Single test results can mislead. Normal eye pressure does not rule it out. Cataract surgery does not protect against it.

A second opinion  from a glaucoma specialist is not about doubting your doctor. It is about protecting your long-term vision.


When Should You Seek an Independent Glaucoma Second Opinion?

You may benefit from one if:

  1. You were diagnosed suddenly and don’t understand why
  2. Different doctors gave different advice
  3. You were told you are a glaucoma suspect, to “watch and wait” without clarity
  4. You are on multiple drops and unsure if risk is controlled
  5. Your visual field or OCT reports are confusing
  6. You have family history of glaucoma
  7. You have high eye pressure but normal tests
  8. You had cataract surgery but glaucoma risk persists
  9. You are worried about progression
  10. When surgery is suggested but you want to understand timing
  11. When tests look stable but vision feels different
  12. When treatment is increasing but clarity is not
  13. When you want long-term risk explained, not just current numbers

Many people seek second opinions simply for reassurance. Or to understand their Visual field and OCT reports. That is completely reasonable. 

Dr Bhartiya has reviewed glaucoma diagnoses from across India, including patients who were overtreated, undertreated, or misclassified as suspects without adequate follow-up. 

That said, many second opinions do not result in treatment changes. Often, they simply help patients understand risk, timelines, and what truly needs attention.


What Makes Independent Glaucoma Second Opinions Different

A true second opinion is not repeating the same test. It is about risk stratification.

In glaucoma, we ask:

    1. What is your lifetime risk of vision loss?

    1. How fast is the disease likely to progress?

    1. What happens if we do nothing for 10 years?

    1. Are we treating numbers or protecting function?

    1. Are tests consistent over time? And progression of disease?

These questions change management more than any single scan. Glaucoma is a neurodegenerative disease affecting the optic nerve. The goal is not just lowering pressure- it is protecting brain-eye function over the long arc of life.

Therefore, the focus is on:

• Independent interpretation of OCT and visual fields
• Looking for progression patterns rather than single reports
• Identifying treatment escalation that may not add benefit
• Identifying under-treatment when risk is underestimated
• Clarifying whether surgery timing is appropriate

The goal is not to replace your treating doctor. The goal is to make sure the long-term direction of care is clear.

Dr Bhartiya’s second opinion is structured around lifetime risk, not single numbers: a framework built on 25 years of subspecialty glaucoma practice and peer-reviewed research


What Happens in a Structured Glaucoma Second Opinion

A proper independent glaucoma second opinion includes six steps.

1. History and Symptom Review

We discuss subtle symptoms that routine exams miss: contrast loss, reading fatigue, night driving discomfort see clearly.

Because patients often compensate without realising.

2. Test Interpretation

Not just repeating tests, but understanding them:

• OCT scans
• Visual fields
• Optic nerve photos
Eye pressure trends
• Corneal thickness

Tests in isolation can mislead. Patterns over time tell the truth.

3. Risk Assessment

We assess your risk based on:

• age
• family history
• optic nerve structure
• field changes
• pressure behaviour
• general health

Two patients with identical pressure may have very different risk.

4. What Is Target Eye Pressure?

Target eye pressure (Target IOP) is the eye pressure level that is likely to keep your glaucoma stable over your lifetime. It is not the same for every patient. Your target is decided based on your optic nerve health, visual field changes, age, rate of progression, and overall risk of vision loss. Two people with the same pressure may need different targets.

Importantly, the goal of treatment is not just to lower a number, but to protect the optic nerve and preserve useful vision for the long term. Your target pressure may change over time as new information becomes available, which is why regular follow-up is essential. Dr Bhartiya’s seminal work on Target IOP is referenced by glaucoma specialists globally.

5. Management Options Explained Clearly

If treatment is needed, options are explained calmly:

Observation – when safe
Drops – when effective and necessary
Laser – when appropriate
Surgery – when risk demands it

More drops do not always mean better care. Timing matters more than quantity.

6. Long-Term Plan

A clear follow-up plan reduces anxiety: How often to test. What changes matter. When to escalate treatment. What symptoms to watch. What tests show glaucoma progression.

Clarity reduces fear, and improves long term outcomes.

A second opinion with Dr Bhartiya is not a repeat of your last appointment. It is a structured review of your lifetime glaucoma risk: built on 94 peer-reviewed publications, 25 years of subspecialty practice, and a patient-centred approach to long-term vision protection


Common Myths About Glaucoma

“My vision is 6/6, so I am fine.”

Many glaucoma patients read the chart perfectly until late stages.

Seeing clearly is not the same as seeing safely.

“My eye pressure is normal.”

Normal-tension glaucoma exists. Structure matters more than numbers.

“Cataract surgery fixed my glaucoma.”

Cataract surgery may lower pressure slightly, but it does not cure glaucoma.

“More drops mean stronger treatment.”

Sometimes fewer, well-timed treatments protect vision better.

“If nothing changed in one year, I’m safe.”

Glaucoma progression often becomes obvious only in retrospect.

Early care prevents late regret.


Why Early, Boring Care Matters

Healthcare systems often reward dramatic surgery and late intervention. But glaucoma is different.

It rewards:

early detection
• consistent follow-up
• careful interpretation
• patient education
steady treatment

This is quiet work. But it saves vision. Many patients who lose sight from glaucoma did everything they were told—they were simply diagnosed too late or monitored incorrectly. Glaucoma second opinions help prevent that.


What to Bring for Your Glaucoma Second Opinion

Don’t worry if you don’t have everything. Come anyway — we will work with what you have. But if you have your records, please remember to bring:

• OCT reports
• Visual field reports
• Previous prescriptions
• Eye pressure records
• Any optic nerve photos
• Medical history

Even reports from many years ago help understand progression. If you don’t have them, we can still help, but more data improves clarity.


Patient-Friendly Explanation Is Essential

A good second opinion should leave you feeling calmer, not more confused.

You should understand:

• your diagnosis
• your risk
• your options
• your timeline

If you leave with clarity, the consultation was successful, even if the advice is simply reassurance and the same as the first doctors’.

Over 1,500 patients have rated their consultation five stars on Google. Read their experiences before your visit

If you want to understand your condition better before deciding:

If you want to understand your condition better before deciding: Explore patient-friendly explanations here


A Note on Ethics

A second opinion is not about doubt. It is about clarity before irreversible decisions.

Seeking a second opinion is not disrespectful to your current doctor. It is responsible healthcare.

Glaucoma decisions affect vision irreversibly. Patients deserve clarity. And often, the second opinion confirms the first and strengthens confidence in your care.


Frequently Asked Questions

1. Why should I take a glaucoma second opinion if my vision is normal?

Many people with glaucoma read the eye chart perfectly until late stages. Early glaucoma affects contrast, low-light vision, and visual safety before clarity. A second opinion helps assess long-term risk, not just current vision.


2. Does a glaucoma second opinion mean my first doctor was wrong?

Not at all. Glaucoma care often has more than one reasonable approach. A second opinion helps confirm diagnosis, clarify risk, and ensure that treatment timing is right for your lifetime vision protection.


3. What reports should I bring for a glaucoma second opinion?

Please bring OCT scans, visual field reports, optic nerve photos, prescriptions, and eye pressure records. Even old reports are useful because glaucoma diagnosis depends on trends over time, not single tests.


4. Can glaucoma be missed in routine eye checkups?

Yes. Routine exams focused on glasses or cataract may not detect early glaucoma. Optic nerve evaluation, visual fields, and OCT are needed to detect subtle structural damage before symptoms appear.


5. If my eye pressure is normal, can I still have glaucoma?

Yes. Normal-tension glaucoma is common. Eye pressure is only one risk factor. Optic nerve structure, visual fields, family history, and progression over time are equally important.


6. I was told to “watch and wait.” Is that safe?

Sometimes observation is appropriate, but it should be based on careful risk assessment. A second opinion can help determine whether observation is safe or whether early treatment would better protect vision.


7. Will I need to repeat all tests during a second opinion?

Not always. Often, existing tests can be carefully interpreted to understand patterns. Additional tests are only recommended if needed for clarity or if previous data is incomplete.


8. Can a glaucoma second opinion be done online?

Initial review of reports can often be done through teleconsultation. However, a full clinical evaluation may be needed in some cases to assess optic nerve structure, pressure variation, and risk accurately.

9. How do I choose a glaucoma specialist in Gurgaon or NCR?

Look for a fellowship trained glaucoma specialist who focuses on early diagnosis, clear communication, and long-term monitoring of glaucoma progression. Look for a glaucoma doctor who is known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent second opinions. You may want to read through their google reviews as well, to see what their patients say about explanations, communication skills and patient centricity.

How to Book a Glaucoma Second Opinion

Consultations in person are ideal. If you can come over for a glaucoma second opinion in Gurgaon. Patients travel from across North India, including Delhi NCR (especially South Delhi, Faridabad, and Noida) for independent glaucoma consultations in person with Dr Shibal Bhartiya. If you can’t, a teleconsult may help.

To prepare a structured review, please fill the second-opinion form on the website before your appointment.

Appointments: +91 88826 38735
Website: drshibalbhartiya.com


Glaucoma Second Opinion Checklist

What to Prepare Before Your Appointment

A structured second opinion is most helpful when we can see your history clearly. Please bring as many of these as possible.


1. Eye Test Reports

Please bring all reports, even old ones.

• OCT scans (both eyes)
• Visual field reports
• Optic nerve photos
• Eye pressure readings
• Pachymetry (corneal thickness)
• Gonioscopy report if available

Old reports are very valuable because glaucoma diagnosis depends on change over time, not single tests.


2. Medication Details

Bring:

• All eye drops you are using
• Previous drops you had used, allergies if any
• How long you used each drop
• Any side effects you noticed

If possible, take a photo of your drops before coming. This helps us understand whether treatment is adequate and sustainable.


3. Medical History

Please tell us if you have:

• Diabetes
• Blood pressure problems
• Thyroid disease
• Migraine
• Sleep apnea
• Steroid use (tablets, inhalers, skin creams)

These conditions can influence glaucoma risk.


4. Family History

Tell us if any family members had:

• Glaucoma
• Blindness of unknown cause
• Long-term eye drop use

Glaucoma often runs in families.


5. Symptom Notes

Even if vision feels normal, write down if you notice:

• Difficulty in dim light
• Trouble with stairs or navigation
• Reading fatigue
• Glare at night
• Feeling slower visually

These subtle symptoms help guide risk assessment.


6. Questions You Want Answered

Write your questions before coming.

Examples:

Do I really have glaucoma?
What is my lifetime risk?
Are my drops necessary?
Can I stop treatment safely?
How often should I test?

A second opinion should leave you with clarity.


7. Glasses and Previous Prescriptions

Bring your current glasses and older prescriptions if available. Changes in power can sometimes give useful clues.


8. If You Don’t Have Reports

Please don’t worry.

Come anyway. We can repeat tests if needed. The goal is clarity, not paperwork perfection.


Before Your Appointment

• Sleep well if possible
• Continue your eye drops unless told otherwise
• Bring someone with you if you feel anxious
• Allow enough time for discussion

Glaucoma decisions should not be rushed.

Closing Thought

Glaucoma does not usually cause pain. It does not usually cause sudden blindness. It quietly narrows life over years if missed.

The goal of a glaucoma second opinion is not fear. It is clarity.

Early, calm, stabilising clarity in a system that often reacts late.

If you are unsure, anxious, or confused about your glaucoma diagnosis, a thoughtful review can protect something precious: your future vision, and your quality of life.

Read the Research Articles

This article was written by Dr Shibal Bhartiya, fellowship-trained glaucoma specialist and Mayo Clinic Research Collaborator, Clinical Director at Marengo Asia Hospitals, Gurugram, known for ethical, patient-centred glaucoma care and independent glaucoma second opinions. She is also the Program Director for Community Outreach & Wellness; and for the Marengo Asia International Institute of Neuro and Spine. This article was updated in April 2026.

She has published peer-reviewed research on glaucoma
management
, examining how treatment decisions should balance medical evidence, patient preferences, and long-term vision outcomes.

As Editor-in-Chief of Clinical and Experimental Vision and Eye Research and Executive Editor of the Journal of Current
Glaucoma Practice
(Pubmed Indexed, official journal of the International Society of Glaucoma Surgery), Dr Shibal Bhartiya brings editorial and research depth to every clinical decision.
Her 200+ publications, including 90+ PubMed-indexed publications and 28 edited textbooks span glaucoma biology, surgical outcomes, health equity, and emerging diagnostics.

Access her work on PubmedGoogle
Scholar
ResearchGate and ORCID.

Dr Shibal
Bhartiya

Glaucoma • Second
Opinion
 • Advanced Care

www.drshibalbhartiya.com
 +91 88826 38735

1500+ Five Star Patient Reviews Google Business Profile

Upload your reports for a structured review.

If you are unable to come to Dr Bhartiya’s clinic: Read more about teleconsultation for glaucoma

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