Dr. Saya Nagori's Fight for Inexpensive Eye Health

Dr. Saya Nagori's Fight for Inexpensive Eye Health
Published: 18 Jun, 2018
3 min read

Dr. Saya Nagori works hard and is dedicated to her work.

I know this because I first spoke with Dr. Nagori a few hours after her boyfriend surprised her with a ring and asked her to marry him.

Between calls to aunts, uncles and old friends from college, Dr. Nagori talked to me for forty-five minutes about her innovative telemedicine business, SimpleContacts.

Eyecare Telemedicine

SimpleContacts is… well… pretty simple. The company’s technologists have developed an app that allows contact wearers to test their eyes on their phone. The results are then interpreted by a team of ophthalmologists and the contacts are shipped immediately after.

The service is only available to people who are otherwise healthy, and just need to renew the contact lens prescription they currently have. If they need a stronger prescription, they are not eligible to use SimpleContacts’ services.

Dr. Nagori estimates that 80% of prescription renewals fall into this category.

Some 500,000 contact lens wearers have been served in the comfort of their homes by SimpleContacts to date, and at a cost lower than a conventional visit to an optometrist. This includes people who live in outlying areas for whom a trip to the optometrist may be an all-day affair.

SimpleContacts has decreased the price and increased access to eye care. After years of debate about doing exactly that, the government should embrace Dr. Nagori with open arms, right?

Congress has been fairly supportive of telemedicine so far, although it is largely undiscussed.

IVP Donate

How Government Hinders Advances in Health Care

The biggest hurdle for Dr. Nagori has been at the state level. Medicine is largely regulated by states. She is subject to 43 separate sets of regulations. Seven states will not allow her to operate.

Her business has 43 masters. Not all of whom fully understand what she does.

Put another way, she has a battle on at least 43 different fronts.

The Vision Council estimates that 47% of Americans accounted for 113.9 million eye exams in 2015. Nearly a six billion dollar market.

If 80% of that market can be serviced by telemedicine providers like SimpleContacts, who is losing that business?

Optometrists.

In an effort to provide eye care to a broader population at a more reasonable price, Dr. Nagori has to fight the entire optometric industry in 43 states.

Dr. Nagori is Seeing Success

But she is having success. She gets great reviews. Lacy from Redding, California says "It was so simple and easy! I have three boys and don't always have time to get a sitter and go to the doctor. Simple Contacts saved time, and money, both of which aren't always in full supply."

Let Us Vote : Sign Now!

Lacy might have added that rural areas like Redding don't have the best coverage by health care professionals, making going to the doctor even more complicated.

Even with a new family and arrows coming at her from 43 directions, Dr. Nagori still finds time to mentor other physician entrepreneurs. She is hosting a Physician Entrepreneur Summit in October. Find out more information here.

For a deeper dive into Dr. Nagori’s effort’s listen to my interview with her on the Medicated USA podcast.

You Might Also Like

New IVP 2026 California Governor Poll: What the Toplines Don’t Tell You
New IVP 2026 California Governor Poll: What the Toplines Don’t Tell You
Using verified California voter file data, IVP surveyed high-propensity voters from February 13 through 20. The poll tested first-choice ballot preferences alongside issue intensity on affordability and the cost of living, immigration enforcement, more choice reform, and more....
23 Feb, 2026
-
10 min read
81% of Americans Say Money Controls Politics – Can a Constitutional Amendment Fix It?
81% of Americans Say Money Controls Politics – Can a Constitutional Amendment Fix It?
Polls consistently show that nearly all Americans across the political spectrum agree that there is too much money in politics – whether from foreign sources, corporations, or so-called “dark money” groups. ...
23 Feb, 2026
-
13 min read
10 Reasons Why the Congressional Stock Trading Ban Will Never Pass
10 Reasons Why the Congressional Stock Trading Ban Will Never Pass
The overlap between committee assignments and stock ownership is not automatically illegal. Because the current legal framework permits this proximity as long as disclosure rules are followed, lawmakers are not operating under a system that forces change....
20 Feb, 2026
-
4 min read