Ophthalmology
The ophthalmologists at Harrington HealthCare - Michael Border, M.D. and Hugh Cooper, M.D., - take special care with what might be our most value possession—our vision. Our comprehensive services include cutting-edge procedures and personalized care for all ages, from infants to seniors, provided at our conveniently located offices.
Services include: routine eye exams, cataract surgery, glaucoma, diabetic eye disease, misalignment, crossed eyes, and pediatric eye diseases and surgery.
Dr. Cooper is one of the area’s few specialists in Pediatric Ophthalmology. He was the first physician in the Worcester area to perform a multifocal lens implant, the latest development in cataract treatment, resulting in greatly reduced dependency on glasses. For an appointment, call 508-764-4400. Dr. Cooper sees patients in Webster and Southbridge.
Dr. Border accepts patients of all ages, offering routine eye exams and office visits as well as surgical procedures, treating patients for a variety of ophthalmic conditions, including cataracts, glaucoma and diabetic eye disease. For an appointment, call 508-765-9068. Dr. Border is located in Harrington's new Eye Center at 20 Southbridge Road, Charlton (Route 169).
Harrington Phsyician Services welcomes Board Eligible Ophthalmologist Lisa Neavyn, M.D., to our office at 20 Southbridge Road in Charlton in March 2013. Dr. Neavyn completed her residency in Ophthalmology at the Kresge Eye Institute in Detroit, where she received the Lawrence L. Stocker Award for Compassionate Medicine.
Dr. Neavyn received her doctorate in medicine from Jefferson Medical College in Philadelphia. She did her internship at Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland, Penn. She graduated Magna Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst.
She will conduct eye exams and also perform surgical procedures, treating patients for a variety of ophthalmic conditions, including cataracts, glaucoma and diabetic eye disease.
Webster resident MJ Parquet raves about her surgery with Dr. Cooper, which corrected her near-sightedness.
