Bifocal contacts lenses are a better option..:)
science bifocal
I'm not sure what you mean by "bifocal stream college." Can you provide more context or clarify your question so I can better assist you?
I am thirteen and I wear contacts. Contacts are great! At first, they were hard to put in, but after a while, you get used to them. They are soooo much less to fuss about than glasses, and it takes only a minute to put them in. Glasses drove me crazy. In my opinion, Contacts are sooo much better
One can order contacts lenses online at a great many places. A few of the better known places include Walgreen's, Lens Crafters, and Clearly Contacts.
Many people find lens implants to be a more comfortable, yet more expensive, solution to vision problems then traditional contacts. If you have the money and hate the hassle of traditional contacts, and aren't afraid of a little surgery, they it may be for you.
bifocals are glass lens that you place upon your nose & push up. they help you see better & / read
Answer As is said below, wearing one contact lens for distance and one for near work (Monovision) can be quite difficult to adjust to. Once adjusted though, the results are generally very good and far better than progressive (varifocal) contact lenses. You will probably feel a little disorientated to start with so be careful when driving ad walking up and down stairs. If you find Monovision works well for you you might want to think about having Monovision laser eye surgery as a more permanent solution. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Answer I am not a doctor, but I went through something similar myself. I'm reading that your eye doctor is giving you one contact lens for distance and one contact lens for reading/close-up work. In general, this is done for older folks to slow the overall weakening of the eyes that comes with age. It takes a little while to get used to and you will discover that using just one eye will work better than squinting when you really need to focus. About the only conflict or problem that I can think of would be that if I were a hunter, or any other "one-eye" activity, I would make sure my working eye was the eye corrected for distance.
Generaly not. It will probably be very uncomfortable and may scratch your eye. It's better to replace it.
It depends on your prescription and where you are shopping. The more complicated your prescription is, whether it be glasses or contacts, the higher the cost will be. The cost also depends on if you are going to a optometrist office (more expensive with higher quality products) or a corporate chain (less expensive with lower quality products) to buy your glasses. Contact lenses are the same quality no matter what store you buy them at as long as they are not expired. On line contact lens wholesalers are usually the cheapest.
eye contacts? yes, if you get the right prescription. they are the same as glasses. suited to your eyes. and you would only need them if you could see properly in the first place.
better vision, less distortion, clear peripheral vision, and cosmetic appeal. In addition, contacts do not steam up from perspiration or changes in temperature.
They could if you use the contact past its expiry date, use dirty hands to touch your contacts, use expiry contact lubricants and if you sleep in contacts beyond the days advised by your optician. So its better to keep them with care.