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Posts by Dr Daya Sharma

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Altmetric score of the book is climbing and we’ve received first news reference in this article theconversation.com/australias-r... with some more author photos below

5 months ago 6 2 0 0

🏏🏏🏏
Proud to be an author in this fantastic book

5 months ago 6 3 1 0

Foresight is already helping me plan laser vision correction for irregular corneas. It helps optimise the treatment profile, and to make sure that the treatment is leaving enough residual corneal tissue.

6 months ago 1 0 0 0

This is a great example of interdisciplinarity! Thirty-nine chapters and 422 pages of knowledge and expertise from authors across the globe. This is our gift to cricket science and medicine. Let's keep our cricketers healthy and thriving!

8 months ago 3 2 0 0
Preview
Cricket Sports Medicine Cricket Sports Medicine is a guide for healthcare professionals on areas including injury prevention, rehabilitation to optimise cricketers of all levels.

Our new book recently published covering injuries, lumbar stress fractures and all other Sports Science Sports Medicine in our great sport of Cricket link.springer.com/book/10.1007...

8 months ago 7 6 0 2
Preview
Gene replacement therapy in Bietti crystalline corneoretinal dystrophy: an open-label, single-arm, exploratory trial - PubMed Bietti crystalline corneoretinal dystrophy is an inherited retinal disease caused by mutations in CYP4V2, which results in blindness in the working-age population, and there is currently no available ...

Experimental gene therapy with subretinal injections for Bietti was published last year. 2/2 pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38653979/

9 months ago 2 0 3 0

My talk was on laser vision correction for irregular corneas (using excimer laser). There are some corneal dystrophies that can be treated with excimer laser. Bietti primarily involves the retina (& this causes the vision loss) although the cornea may also be involved with crystalline deposits. 1/

9 months ago 0 0 1 0
Video

First talk done in Darwin. I spoke at the Schwind Laser User Meeting on one of my favourite subjects: customising laser vision correction for unusual eyes. Something new for this year is Foresight software, which allows us to simulate outcomes with different laser treatment plans. #lasereyesurgery

9 months ago 2 1 1 0

@ichatanu.bsky.social hello. You should post something! 😉

10 months ago 1 0 1 0
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The original post said “This poor car is just trying to live its best life in peace, until it dies of natural causes (spontaneous combustion).”

11 months ago 0 1 1 0
Bumper sticker says:

Heart emoji EV
NOT ELON

Bumper sticker says: Heart emoji EV NOT ELON

Rear view of white Tesla model 3 with a “heart emoji EV not Elon” bumper sticker

Rear view of white Tesla model 3 with a “heart emoji EV not Elon” bumper sticker

This poor car is just trying to live its best life in peace.

11 months ago 2 1 1 0
Christian Van Camp ® ®
@cvcwellness
Follow
I've improved my vision from -3.25 to -2.5 naturally— plus healed an astigmatism in less than 2 years.
No surgeries. No miracle pills. Just crystal CLEAR
protocols.
My eye doc was confused. I didn't go back. Why would I?
When you stop outsourcing your health, you start healing:
Macular Degeneration
Normal Eye
Optic disc
Cornea
Retina
Cornea
Optic nerve
Focal point
Myopic Eye
Normall
"Wet" Macular Degeneration
"Dry" Macular Degeneration
Cornea
Retina
01:23 • 8/5/2025 • 158K Views
6
1>70
753
468

Christian Van Camp ® ® @cvcwellness Follow I've improved my vision from -3.25 to -2.5 naturally— plus healed an astigmatism in less than 2 years. No surgeries. No miracle pills. Just crystal CLEAR protocols. My eye doc was confused. I didn't go back. Why would I? When you stop outsourcing your health, you start healing: Macular Degeneration Normal Eye Optic disc Cornea Retina Cornea Optic nerve Focal point Myopic Eye Normall "Wet" Macular Degeneration "Dry" Macular Degeneration Cornea Retina 01:23 • 8/5/2025 • 158K Views 6 1>70 753 468

Christian Van Camp ® g
@cvcwellness
Follow
Most people think losing your eyesight is just part of
"aging"
Nope. It's part of modern life: nonstop screens, trash lighting, zero ancestral habits.
Your vision isn't broken. It's just begging for a CLEAR lifestyle.
Let me show you HOW to improve your eyesight to 20/20:
BEFORE
AFTER
01:23 • 8/5/2025 • 2.3M Views
186
2.9K
16K
34K

Christian Van Camp ® g @cvcwellness Follow Most people think losing your eyesight is just part of "aging" Nope. It's part of modern life: nonstop screens, trash lighting, zero ancestral habits. Your vision isn't broken. It's just begging for a CLEAR lifestyle. Let me show you HOW to improve your eyesight to 20/20: BEFORE AFTER 01:23 • 8/5/2025 • 2.3M Views 186 2.9K 16K 34K

Improvement in short-sightedness (myopia) from -3.25D to -2.50D translates to going from very blurred distance vision to very blurred distance vision; still nowhere near able to drive without correction.

11 months ago 1 1 0 0

Do you know anyone who has served in the ADF?

11 months ago 0 0 1 0
Preview
Eyes on the Pitch: New Focus on Cricket's UV Danger - mivision Cricket. It’s inextricably linked to the antipodean summer… the sound of bat on ball, the sporadic cries of ‘howzat’, and the soothing drone of the commentary on the radio.

Fair. I see a lot of pilots & just posted a story about a helicopter pilot. We also work with professional cricketers. Army is one example of a career that has particular vision standards. For me, it’s not about Army per se but improving vision to meet requirements. mivision.com.au/2024/10/eyes...

11 months ago 0 0 0 0

Clearly I’m not an advertising professional, and so no I definitely don’t take that personally. I am listening. I am engaging professionals.

I have to make an observation that you did engage with it - even because you hated it. You didn’t scroll immediately.

11 months ago 1 0 1 0

You make an excellent point. This is really an extension of a discussion for LinkedIn where the audience is ophthalmologists/optometrists & recruiters. But I am telling the story in a way I think would make sense to someone thinking of laser vision correction (maybe for an occupational requirement).

11 months ago 1 0 0 0

No. I can see why you might think that. What this patient’s story demonstrates is that there are some people who have occupational requirements for good vision and sometimes glasses or contacts are not an option. Also 7D of astigmatism unaided is pretty debilitating.

11 months ago 1 0 1 0

You might have missed the point that with his habitual vision, he also couldn’t get a driver’s licence or catch a ball properly.

11 months ago 0 0 1 0
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The context is that this arose after a discussion on LinkedIn with a police recruiter about vision standards & laser vision correction for recruitment. It wasn’t my dream to join the military. Yes I made this myself. Why? Because I think it’s more engaging than plain text which I would normally use.

11 months ago 0 0 2 0
Video

This young man dreamed of serving his country, but severe #astigmatism with intolerance of glasses & contacts held him back.
He had #LASIK & now proudly wears the uniform.
#Lasereyesurgery doesn't just improve sight, it transforms lives.
If your vision is holding you back, let's talk.

11 months ago 3 0 1 1

It was an honour to be able to use my great-grandfather’s ceremonial sword to cut our wedding cake; a family tradition.

#AnzacDay #LestWeForget

11 months ago 4 0 1 0

His son Terry followed his path, serving as a rear gunner in bombers over Europe during WWII. His calm under pressure and loyalty to his crew were qualities spoken of long after the war.

Their legacy lives on through all Australians who continue to serve with the same quiet courage.

11 months ago 5 1 1 0

Brigadier Harnett served with distinction in both WWI and WWII, rising through the ranks to become a senior leader in the Australian Army. His courage was noted in dispatches, and his medals reflect campaigns across two global conflicts.

#AnzacDay #LestWeForget

11 months ago 2 1 1 0
Photo of Brigadier General Edward Thomas Harnett with his medals

Photo of Brigadier General Edward Thomas Harnett with his medals

Photo of Captain Edward Harnett in uniform returning to Australia in 1919.

Photo of Captain Edward Harnett in uniform returning to Australia in 1919.

Photo of the gravestone of Brigadier Harnett and his wife Kathleen.

Photo of the gravestone of Brigadier Harnett and his wife Kathleen.

Photo of my wedding; Shanel and I are cutting the wedding cake using my great-grandfather's ceremonial sword.

Photo of my wedding; Shanel and I are cutting the wedding cake using my great-grandfather's ceremonial sword.

Lest We Forget.

This Anzac Day, I remember and honour my great-grandfather, Brigadier Edward Thomas “Eddie” Harnett, and his son, my great-uncle Flight Sergeant Terence “Terry” Harnett, whose service spanned both world wars.

#AnzacDay #LestWeForget

11 months ago 9 2 1 0
Video

🚁She used to see air traffic second.
👩‍✈️Laser vision correction improved how she flies.

Lauren is a commercial helicopter pilot who wore glasses for high astigmatism. See her story.
#lasereyesurgery #LASIK #vision #eyes #SmartSight #laservisioncorrection

1 year ago 0 1 0 0
Preview
Twenty Lessons, read by John Lithgow Key selections from On Tyranny, for viewing and sharing

"On Tyranny" is a #1 NYT bestseller again. I wish the moment were different. But I’m glad the book is useful. And grateful for all the kind words about putting the 20 lessons to work.
snyder.substack.com/p/twenty-les...

1 year ago 20512 5332 491 273
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Picture of me holding the book “Tested” by Pat Cummins

Picture of me holding the book “Tested” by Pat Cummins

📘 What can an elite cricketer teach eye surgeons?

While reviewing “Tested” by Pat Cummins for the AAO, I didn’t expect to revisit so many pearls of wisdom that are directly applicable to improving clinical practice.

It’s a quiet masterclass in performing under pressure & recovering from failure.

1 year ago 5 1 1 0
Abstract. Surgeon Henry Marsh begins his autobiography, Do No Harm, with a quotation from the French practitioner René Leriche, "Every surgeon carries within himself a small cemetery, where from time to time he goes to pray —a place of bitterness and regret, where he must look for an explanation for his failures"
вм) https://mh.bmj.com
'A small cemetery': death and dying in the contemporary British operating theatre

Abstract. Surgeon Henry Marsh begins his autobiography, Do No Harm, with a quotation from the French practitioner René Leriche, "Every surgeon carries within himself a small cemetery, where from time to time he goes to pray —a place of bitterness and regret, where he must look for an explanation for his failures" вм) https://mh.bmj.com 'A small cemetery': death and dying in the contemporary British operating theatre

I suspect the framing of the question is the problem (asking for a binary answer). I think some surgeons would interpret this as a personal or emotional toll that interferes with their function. That’s very different. Henry Marsh reminds us all well of the tolls of surgery.

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

Looks like an army of virions

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

We’re living in an age where you can tell who read dystopian fiction properly, and who didn’t.

1 year ago 1 0 0 0