I thought long and hard about getting PRK before applying, but reality comes down to the fact that I simply do not have the money. I'm also only 20 and from what I heard from several opthamalogists, PRK is not recommended until around 25. My dream job is to be a pilot, but I would be more than satisified as an NFO. If accepted into the program, although difficult, I do plan on pursuing the NFO to Pilot pipeline.
Well, there is a lot to say about getting the surgery too young. My surgeon went by a rule of 3 years with no prescription change, not age.
Every place I talked to did a free eval - I'd schedule one, get all of your questions asked and ask them about financing. When they told me about it, I thought I was at a car store, but they offered me 2 year financing for 4k.
Another really convoluted way to get the money, but you can take out a 0% interest loan against your schooling, use it to pay for the surgery in one fell swoop and then pay back your loan with BDCP money before you even graduate.
And wrt age - I had it done shortly before 23, so whoever said 25 is wrong. And I know of a lot more people on here that had it in the 20-22 range.
Don't let something like 4k determine your career path. I know 4k is no small chunk of change, especially for a broke ass college student, but its not like you'd never be able to pay off the debt... just don't write off getting a SNA slot without doing thorough research first.
To clarify on the contact lens question, I meant do I need a SCL waiver to apply for NFO? I just started trying out soft lenses a couple of weeks ago, and if a waiver (with 6 months paperwork) is required for the application process, then I'm just gonna go with my glasses.
No, you just have to be correctable. The 6 months for the waiver is for the PRK, not contacts.
Here's a link to the waiver guide, if you don't already have it:
http://www.med.navy.mil/sites/navmedmpte/nomi/nami/arwg/Pages/default.aspx
But going with what you said about the old SCL waiver, do you mean I can apply for Pilot even with 20/100 vision as long as I get a waiver?
No, thats how it used to be - they got rid of that and said you have to be 20/40 or better with no correction to fly, 20/20 with correction. (glasses or contacts)