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Alberta MD urges province to buy corneas from US

An Edmonton doctor is asking his patients to push the government to pay for eyes from the US in the face of shortages in Alberta

Eye shortage means wait of 2 or 3 years for transplant patients, says transplant doctor

Rod Bennett, waiting for a cornea transplant after losing sight in his left eye two years ago, worries he will lose sight in the right eye before a cornea becomes available. (CBC)

An Edmonton eye specialist is encouraging his patients to push the province to pay for corneas from the United States in the face of a donor shortage in Canada.

Dr. David Climenhaga says the problem for patients in Alberta isnt getting in tothe operating room, but not having enough corneas to transplant.

"The waiting list is in excess of two years, probably approaching three years, for cornea tissue. If tissue was available then the people that are waiting would then have access to the surgery," said Climenhaga.

Hes been sending letters to patients, asking them to press the provincial government to buy corneas from south of the border, where they are more plentiful.

Rod Bennett, one of Climenhagas patients, has been waiting for transplant after losing sight in his left eye two years ago.

Hes worried he may lose sight in the right eye before a cornea becomes available.

"I'm getting to the point now where I'm saying, I need this now. I'm ready. I need this now," he said.

"It's kind of like a plane in a holding pattern," he said. "You're hoping that you get there before you run out of fuel."

Its estimated it would cost between $2,000 - $3,000 per cornea to bring them in from the United States, much of it for transportation of the organs.

In a written statement to CBC News, Alberta Health Services says it has no plans to purchase corneas from the U.S.