Joseph M. Ortiz MD
Consultant in Ophthalmology, Abington Memorial Hospital, Abington, PennsylvaniaDr. Joseph Ortiz is a consultant in ophthalmology at Abington Memorial Hospital in Pennsylvania. He was formerly Associate Professor of Ophthalmology and Head of the Glaucoma Division and Associate Resident Program Director at Drexel University in Philadelphia. Previously, he held a similar position at Cooper Hospital – UMDNJ in Camden, New Jersey.
He is a diplomate of the American Board of Ophthalmology and a fellow of the American Board of Ophthalmology, the Royal College of Ophthalmologists (UK), and the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. He is a member of the American Glaucoma Society, the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, the American Association of Ophthalmic Oncologists and Pathologists, and the American Medical Association.
Dr. Joseph M. Ortiz earned his medical degree from New York Medical College, following which he did 1 year of anatomical pathology at Yale – New Haven Hospital, which was then followed by an NIH fellowship in ocular pathology at the Scheie Eye Institute – University of Pennsylvania, where he completed his residency in ophthalmology. This was followed by a glaucoma fellowship at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge, England. He completed a concurrent fellowship in ocular immune disease at Moorfields Eye Hospital in London.
Recent Contributions to PracticeUpdate:
- Diurnal IOP Fluctuations in Glaucoma Using Latanoprost and Timolol With Self-Tonometry
- Failed Trabeculectomy Does Not Impact Outcomes of Glaucoma Drainage Implant Surgery
- Optical Microangiography and Risk of Glaucoma Progression
- Diagnostic Performance of Swept-Source Anterior Segment OCT in Primary Angle Closure Disease
- Retinal Nerve Fibre Layer Defect Detection by Ultrawide-Field Fundus Photography
- Minimally Invasive Glaucoma Surgical Techniques for Open-Angle Glaucoma
- Outcomes of Primary Trabeculectomy in Patients With Open-Angle Glaucoma
- Ab-Externo MicroShunt vs Trabeculectomy in POAG
- Viability of Performing Multiple 24-2 Visual Field Examinations at the Same Clinical Visit
- XEN45 Gel Stent Implantation Success Rates and IOP-Lowering Potential in Pseudophakic Eyes