Master 25 Ophthalmology interview questions covering clinical cases, surgical expertise, and patient care scenarios.
Question 7 of 25
How to Answer
Example Answer
Community Answers

Ryan Brown created and launched MockQuestions in 2008.
Before you interview, you should learn the demographics of this group or hospital. You should be comfortable with the demographic distribution because that will determine the type of practice you will have or how you will interact with this demographic. Regardless of whether they take care of such patients, you should always state you have no personal problems seeing anyone who needs you--you just can't go wrong saying this! Many groups and hospitals are required, for example, to have a 'life-and-limb' list of doctors who rotate turns seeing uninsured emergency patients. If a hospital, for example, accepts any federal funds (Medicare or Medicaid), no patient can be refused in their Emergency Department. If your practice does not accept patients under a federal or state program, if you're doing your duty serving on a 'life-and-limb' ED rotation, you will still be required to see such patients as well as provide follow-up in your office, regardless of your practice preferences. Of course, in Ophthalmology, it is assumed you accept Medicare.

Ryan Brown created and launched MockQuestions in 2008.
"Having issues with seeing anyone would go against my own values--I will see anyone who needs my services. I know that the demographic here includes the elderly, which is a sizeable part of my patient base, so taking care of them would be my obligation if I am presented such a scenario, whether it were a patient of mine or not."

Interview Coach
Jaymie
A real coach, not AI. I read every answer myself and write back with personalized feedback.
Typically responds within 24 hours.
0 - Character Count
Prepare for questions on diagnostics, procedures, and complex clinical reasoning that interviewers expect.
Get StartedJump to Question
By
By