About/News

About
 
 
The Dean McGee Eye Institute and the Dean McGee Eye Institute Foundation are both 501(c)(3) organizations. The Dean McGee Eye Institute (DMEI) is dedicated to providing the highest quality patient care and a center for vision research.

DMEI is also home to the Department of Ophthalmology of the University of Oklahoma and conducts training programs for medical students, residents, and clinical fellows. The Dean McGee Eye Institute operations employ over 200 people in the Oklahoma City metro area. In addition to its main campus in the Oklahoma Health Center, DMEI has other clinic locations in Edmond, Northwest Oklahoma City, and Lawton.

The first two floors of the Institute are devoted to outpatient clinics under the direction of ophthalmologists from the Department of Ophthalmology and DMEI. Patient care is provided in all the major subspecialty areas of ophthalmology including corneal and external diseases, glaucoma, medical and surgical diseases of the retina and vitreous, refractive surgery, orbital and oculoplastic diseases, neuro-ophthalmology, pediatric ophthalmology and strabismus, cataract surgery and lens implantation, ophthalmic pathology and oncology, contact lenses, ocular prosthetics, trauma and low vision services.

 
DMEI ranks as one of the largest ophthalmology institutes in the United States and is one of only a small handful of institutions in the Southwest and Midwest which offers this complete spectrum of subspecialty eye care for everything from tumors to macular degeneration. DMEI provides services for over 120,000 patient visits each year. Nearly 40% of those patients are from outside the Oklahoma City metro area. The Institute offers care to all patients regardless of their ability to pay. In 2003 DMEI provided over $1.4 million dollars of uncompensated care to indigent Oklahomans.

Physicians and basic scientists conduct an active program of research into the mechanisms and treatments of eye disease. Currently, research is underway into problems of endophthalmitis, diabetic retinopathy, age-related macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa, intraocular tumors, mechanisms of retinal degeneration, glaucoma, retinopathy of prematurity, and inflammation and viral infections of the cornea.

 
Support for this research is provided by grants from the National Eye Institute (NEI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH); national vision research philanthropies (including Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc and the Foundation Fighting Blindness); the Dean McGee Eye Institute Foundation; regional foundations (including the Presbyterian Health Foundation and the Noble Foundation); industry; and by private donations. In 1999 DMEI vision researchers received Oklahoma's first ever National Institutes of Health Core Grant-awarded in recognition of its critical mass of highly productive, nationally renowned scientists.

 
The Dean McGee Eye Institute / Department of Ophthalmology now ranks in the top ten research institutions supported by NEI and has received more support from Research to Prevent Blindness (the world's largest vision research foundation) than all but five other vision research institutions. The DMEI research expenditures will total over $6.8 million in 2003.

Community service remains a major aspect of DMEI's mission. During 2003 DMEI conducted programs for 1400 students from Oklahoma's elementary and secondary schools, Vo-Tech campuses, and junior colleges to interest students in the eye and in the health professions. Selected students from metro area schools are provided with the opportunity to participate in an eight week long summer program at DMEI.

DMEI's forty-plus M.D. and Ph.D. faculty supervise the training of medical students at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center. They also direct residency training for nine residents. Clinical fellowship programs are available to provide additional training in glaucoma, cornea and external diseases and refractive surgery, oculoplastic and reconstructive surgery, neuro-ophthalmology, and diseases and the surgery of the retina and vitreous.

The Dean McGee Eye Institute sponsors continuing medical education programs to enhance the ability of practicing ophthalmologists to deliver the finest eye care. Increasingly, international delegations of ophthalmologists and vision researchers travel to Oklahoma to visit DMEI for conferences, continuing education, and research symposia.
 
 
Copyright © 2010 The Dean A. McGee Eye Institute, All rights reserved.
DMEI Disclaimers