Choosing a surgeon for cataract surgery is a significant decision. For straightforward cases, a wide range of ophthalmologists deliver excellent results. But for patients with complex eyes, combined diseases, or who are considering premium intraocular lenses, the depth and breadth of a surgeon's training becomes increasingly relevant.
This article explains what subspecialty training involves, why it matters for certain patients, and how my own training background shapes the care I provide to Melbourne patients.
The Ophthalmology Training Pathway in Australia
To become an ophthalmologist in Australia, a doctor must complete:
- Medical degree (MBBS or equivalent)
- Internship and basic physician training
- A highly competitive, nationally accredited 5-year ophthalmology training program through RANZCO (Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Ophthalmologists)
- Fellowship examination to achieve FRANZCO — the specialist qualification
FRANZCO is the standard that all practising ophthalmologists in Australia must hold. The training is rigorous and comprehensive. Registrars perform hundreds of cataract operations under supervision during their training years.
What Subspecialty Fellowship Training Adds
Following FRANZCO qualification, some ophthalmologists undertake a further 1–2 year subspecialty fellowship focused on a specific area of the field. Common subspecialties include:
- Cataract and anterior segment surgery
- Corneal and external diseases
- Vitreoretinal surgery
- Glaucoma
- Refractive surgery
- Oculoplastics and orbital surgery
- Paediatric ophthalmology
A fellowship provides:
- High surgical volume in a specific domain — essential for developing technique and judgment
- Exposure to complex and rare cases that are referred to tertiary centres
- Immersion in the current literature and research in the subspecialty
- Training in advanced techniques not routinely performed in general ophthalmology
- Mentorship from recognised experts in the field
Why It Matters for Cataract Surgery in 2026
The majority of cataract operations in Australia are straightforward and can be performed safely by any trained FRANZCO ophthalmologist. But a significant proportion of patients present with factors that increase complexity:
- Dense or mature cataracts with poor red reflex
- Small pupils, iridodonesis, or zonular weakness
- Combined cataract and corneal disease (e.g. Fuchs dystrophy)
- Prior refractive surgery (LASIK, PRK, RK) affecting biometry accuracy
- High axial myopia or hyperopia
- Combined procedures (cataract + corneal transplant)
- Revision or secondary IOL procedures
For these patients, a surgeon who has trained in a subspecialty environment — and seen hundreds of such cases — brings a depth of experience and technical capacity that differs meaningfully from a general practitioner in ophthalmology.
Subspecialty Training and Premium IOLs
Premium intraocular lenses — EDOF lenses (such as the Alcon Vivity and Tecnis Symfony), multifocal IOLs, and toric lenses — are more demanding to select and implant than standard lenses. Optimising outcomes with these lenses requires:
- Detailed pre-operative corneal topography and tomography to exclude irregular astigmatism
- Accurate biometry with multiple devices and formula comparison
- Understanding of each lens platform's optical characteristics and limitations
- Precise surgical technique — lens centration matters more for diffractive lenses
- Thorough patient selection and counselling — managing expectations is as important as the surgery itself
For Melbourne patients considering premium lens implants, experience in cataract and anterior segment subspecialty surgery provides a more reliable foundation for these outcomes. More detail on IOL selection is available at corneaeyedoctor.com.au.
My Training Background
I completed my medical degree (MD Honours) at New York Medical College, followed by an internship at Columbia University Medical Center and a residency in ophthalmology at Brown University, where I was appointed Chief Resident and received the William G. Tsiaras Research Award.
I then undertook a subspecialty fellowship at the Wilmer Eye Institute, Johns Hopkins University — consistently ranked among the world's leading eye hospitals — focused on corneal disease and anterior segment surgery. I was awarded the Henry D. Jampel Research Grant during this period.
Returning to Australia, I completed a corneal fellowship at the Royal Victorian Eye and Ear Hospital (RVEEH) — the national referral centre for corneal disease in Australia — and continue as a Staff Specialist on the RVEEH Cornea Unit. I perform cataract surgery, corneal transplantation, and laser refractive surgery at Northpark Private Hospital in Bundoora.
This combination of North American subspecialty training at one of the world's leading centres, combined with ongoing work at Australia's leading corneal unit, provides the experience base I bring to every consultation — from the straightforward to the genuinely complex.
When Subspecialty Experience Specifically Matters
For most patients, a competent general ophthalmologist will deliver an excellent cataract surgery result. But subspecialty training becomes particularly relevant if you:
- Have combined cataract and corneal disease (Fuchs dystrophy, corneal scarring)
- Have had prior corneal refractive surgery affecting your lens power calculation
- Have unusually long or short eyes (high myopia or hyperopia)
- Are considering a premium lens and want the most reliable outcome
- Have been told your cataract is complex
- Have had a complication with a previous eye surgery
For a complete overview of my surgical approach and credentials, see the About page. For cataract surgery information, visit corneaeyedoctor.com.au.