A Lifetime in Glasses
Nour Hassan, a 29-year-old pharmacist in Cairo, had worn glasses since age 10. Her prescription — -7.5 in the right eye, -8.0 in the left, with -1.25 diopters of astigmatism bilaterally — made contact lenses her only cosmetic alternative. But after years of daily lens wear, she developed contact lens intolerance: dry eyes, corneal neovascularization, and recurring irritation that forced her back to thick glasses.
The SMILE Opportunity
Her Cairo ophthalmologist recommended SMILE (Small Incision Lenticule Extraction) over LASIK for her high myopia — SMILE preserves more corneal biomechanical strength and causes less dry eye. The problem: only two VisuMax machines existed in Egypt at the time, with a four-month waiting list, and her surgeon had fewer than 200 SMILE cases. For high myopia, experience matters enormously.
A Five-Day Plan
Nour found SSAnkang through an Egyptian medical tourism group. A Shanghai eye center had performed over 50,000 SMILE procedures on the latest VisuMax 800 platform — one of the highest-volume centers in Asia. She designed a five-day itinerary: fly Thursday, exam Friday, surgery Saturday, recovery Sunday-Monday, sightseeing Tuesday, fly home Wednesday.
Day 1 — Comprehensive Examination
Corneal topography, pachymetry (560 microns — adequate margin for high correction), wavefront aberrometry, pupillometry, Schirmer test, and meibomian gland assessment. The surgeon confirmed SMILE suitability and programmed her correction.
Day 2 — Surgery
Bilateral SMILE procedure: 12 minutes total. The femtosecond laser created a thin lenticule within each cornea, which the surgeon removed through a 2mm incision. No flap, no blade, no pain. Nour walked out wearing protective goggles and reported only mild pressure during the procedure.
Day 3 — Already Seeing
Morning check: 20/25 bilateral. Mild foreign body sensation that resolved by afternoon. Prescribed lubricant drops every two hours. By evening, Nour was reading restaurant menus without any correction for the first time in 19 years.
Day 5 — Cleared for Departure
20/20 bilateral. Corneal healing on track. Cleared for the flight home. That afternoon, Nour visited The Bund and took the first photos in her adult life without glasses or contacts. One-month remote follow-up: 20/15 bilateral, zero dry eye symptoms.
The Model
Nour's case illustrates that medical tourism doesn't always mean weeks away from work. Her total absence from the pharmacy: five working days (Thursday to Wednesday). Total cost: $3,200 USD for bilateral SMILE including all exams, compared to $6,000 in Cairo and $8,000+ in Dubai.