Will Mellor Ironically, having recently appeared in the dramatisation of the Post Office scandal, actor Will Mellor is actively supporting and promoting an even bigger scandal - that of the unregulated refractive surgery industry 👀
NB: At this point I should mention that my first draft was kinder to Will, the word ‘unwittingly’ in place of ‘actively’, until I checked Instagram and discovered that he's advertising his availability for endorsements!
With details of his lens exchange operations last month published in at least a dozen publications (and via Will’s own social media accounts), both Will and OCL Vision are having a field day with the publicity this has generated - still milking it according to a quick Google search!
I couldn’t care less what Will endorses, as long as it's not eye surgery, that he knows nothing about, including the many thousands of people whose eyes and lives have been ruined by ALL types of unregulated refractive surgery!
He should consider this lesson: in 2020, Paul Dance hanged himself after devastating results of #RLE at #Optegra, having trusted Ruth Langsford's paid promotion of the company.
From one newspaper article: "Prior to the surgery, Will revealed his eyesight issues were getting him down... 'wherever I was, if I didn't have my glasses with me, I'd have to have my wife read things to me. It’s life-changing, the amount of things I probably missed and not being able to see properly over the years that now I don’t miss anymore.'"
Kerap!
He wasn't blind, or close to it, and no worse off than millions of people who wear glasses.
And way too soon to consider his surgery a success, when at only 1 day post op, Will irresponsibly advertised it as ‘amazing', even though complaining of flashing lights:
"I have this flashing at the side of my eyes when I go into a bright room or even now if I turn my head. Hopefully that’s normal."
“Considering I had the operation yesterday, it’s amazing. I just wanted to keep you posted, just in case you’re thinking of having it done.”
www.mirror.co.uk/3am/celebrity-news/mell...rgery-after-31897335
Had he done his research, Will would have discovered that at the age of 47 he was too young for RLE, at greater risk of retinal detachment, with flashing lights a warning sign. There could be other reasons for this too, but by operating on him, surgeon Romesh Angulawela, a member of The Royal College of Ophthalmologists, was ignoring and breaching their (unenforceable) guidelines:
www.rcophth.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/202...ient-Information.pdf
Unfortunately, using RCOphth guidance (written by refractive surgeons!) the #notfitforpurpose General Medical Council (GMC) recklessly clump refractive eye surgery in with cosmetic procedures:
‘'Questions about our cosmetic interventions guidance’
...any intervention, procedure, or treatment carried out with the primary objective of changing an aspect of a patient’s physical appearance. This includes surgical and non-surgical procedures, both invasive and non-invasive.’
www.gmc-uk.org/professional-standards/le...interventions---faqs
I fail to see the similarity, and repeatedly point out that laser or lens eye surgery is NOT cosmetic, and should NEVER be referred to as such; refractive surgery changes the way we see, while cosmetic surgery changes the way we are seen, and taking off a pair of glasses cannot by any stretch of the imagination be compared to a facelift or nose job!
However, according to the GMC's foolish logic, #cataractsurgery must also be a cosmetic procedure.
And while I doubt that he’ll be so vocal about any post op problems he may encounter, be it in the next few weeks or a year from now, details of Will’s surgery, as told in numerous publications and media outlets, will have resulted in a waiting list of patients wanting the same surgery, with the same surgeon, all relying on the uninformed and irresponsible advertising from a TV actor who has been paid to spread the word. Therefore, blame for any damage they may suffer must be shared by Will, who should stick to what he knows!
NB: RLE/refractive lens exchange is the same procedure as cataract surgery, but extracting perfectly healthy natural lenses.
Fao Will Mellor:
'Incidence and Risk Factors for Retinal Detachment and Retinal Tear after Cataract Surgery’
'Although cataract surgery is safe and effective in improving vision and visual functioning, postsurgical complications may occur.'
'RRD [Rhegmatogenous retinal detachment] occurs in approximately 1 in 500 cataract surgeries in patients aged > 40 years within 1 year of surgery... Additional risk factors for RRD included male gender, younger age, hypermature cataract, PVD, and high myopia.'
'Similarly, the 1-year incidence of RD after cataract surgery was also higher for men than women.’
'ORs revealed an increased risk of RRD among males and younger ages compared with patients aged > 70 years'
© 2023 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Ophthalmology: the full pdf in comments below 👇