2015 Emory Eye Magazine | Page 24

News | Patient stories So that the GOOD WORK can go on Sharyn Dowd is a busy associate pastor, ministering to numerous church members and working in various mission activities. Every day brings a set of challenges and ongoing involvement with community and outreach organizations. She constantly sees to the needs of others— checking on the sick, the bereaved, the impoverished, and those who are seeking community and connection. Dowd knows very well how to take care of others in her multiple roles. She currently serves as Pastor for Caring and Serving Ministries at Decatur’s First Baptist Church. But during her second year in EmKeratoconus and corneal ory’s Graduate Division of Religion PhD program in transplants affect the front 1981, Dowd was diagnosed curvature of the eye and with bilateral keratoconus by specialists at the Emory therefore have significant Eye Center. She needed, impact on how light focuses at that point, for others to into the eye. Specially designed take care of her. As her keratoconus contact lenses can substantially progressed, Dowd was improve visual acuity beyond told she needed corneal transplants, a significant what is possible with spectacles. inconvenience for any Sclera lenses are fluid-filled student undergoing the and can be used therapeutically rigors of graduate school, particularly for a student to treat severe dryness as well with limited funds. With as correct high degrees of financial help, first from the surgeon who dropped irregular astigmatism. These his fee and then from the lenses offer very good comfort Georgia Lions Lighthouse and maximize a person’s visual Foundation, she was able to cover the costs not covered potential for conditions with by her student insurance. irregular cornea shapes. She was most grateful. Dowd was able to go —Michael Ward on with her studies and to an impressive career in academics as a professor of New Testament at Lexington Theological Seminary (Kentucky) and Baylor University (Texas). While at Baylor, she was also a member of the pastoral staff of Calvary Baptist Church, where she was responsible for leading ministries in the church’s lower-income, racially mixed neighborhood. 22 Emory Eye | 2015 Life was fulfilling, and Dowd was able to make a difference to those she taught and ministered to throughout three decades of serving. Fast forward to 2013, and Dowd was again living in Atlanta. She developed severe dry eye problems that were not corrected by lubricating and medicated eye drops. The dryness was significant enough that she was in pain each day, and the pain limited her ability to wear contact lenses and therefore, to see. At Emory, cornea specialist John Kim suggested that she see contact lens specialist Michael Ward about the possibility of scleral contact lenses. She did, and, as she says of the lenses, “they are rather expensive,” but “they have completely solved my eye problem.” “Dr. Dowd was becoming contact lens intolerant. Therefore, she was visually handicapped and incapable of functioning on a day-to-day level,” says Ward. “With the new scleral lenses, she was again able to attain her normal level of activity.” “I can say that had it not been for the successful transplants initially and the various specialized contact lenses that I have worn during the past 33 years H