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Eglin doctor keeps eye on goal, wins DoD, AF awards

  • Published
  • By Samuel King Jr.
  • 96th Air Base Wing
From humble Kansas, beginnings to examining Air Force eyes, Eglin's top optometrist is coming off one "great year".

Lt. Col. Annette Williamson, 96th Aerospace Medicine Squadron, earned top honors, winning Optometrist of the Year for The Armed Forces Optometric Society, Association of Military Surgeons and the Air Force.

For Colonel Williamson, 2009 was an "incredibly" busy year. Locally, she filled in as squadron commander of AMDS, for the deployed commander. She had an even greater impact at the Air Force level serving as the lead optometry consultant for the Optometry Optimization Initiative. The program was designed to help standardize Air Force optometry practices and maximize the capabilities of its mission.

She also stepped in as the optometry lead of the Air Force's refractive (laser-eye) surgery program due to another deployment. If that wasn't enough, she helped found the Air Force Opthalmic Corporate Board, which helped the transition of the newly merged career fields of Optometry and Ophthalmology technicians.

"The end result of the merger is to ensure those technicians can support those doctors down range," said the Air War College graduate, who also turned 50 in 2009.

All of these extra projects, along with her daily job of running Eglin's optometry clinic caring for 8,000 active duty patients and their eyes, garnered her much deserved praise.

"From a clinical perspective, obtaining top honors as the 'Best Optometrist' for the Air Force and entire DoD is truly a phenomenal accomplishment," said Col. Gary Hurwitz, 96 AMDS commander. "In addition to being recognized for superior clinical acumen, she has excelled as an Air Force officer, having served at both the strategic level (while on the Air Staff), and also at the operational level as flight commander and deputy squadron commander - something that kept her exceedingly busy last year, while covering as commander during my deployment. In my mind, the awards committees couldn't have selected a more deserving officer."

As the colonel reminisced about how she got to this point, each major change in her life began with a new goal.

After being accepted at Northeastern State University in Oklahoma, but without a focus, a friend easily talked her into optometry.

"That was the extent of my career counseling," joked the tall 15-year veteran, whose big laugh is infectious. "Now I had a goal, and it turned out to be a very good goal."

She stayed at Northeastern State to earn her doctorate before settling into private practice for five years. Later, she worked in pediatric ophthalmology for three years - a career path she said she enjoyed and learned a great deal from.

"I could be silly with the kids and still handle some serious situations," she said. "But I got bored. I no longer had a new goal to achieve."

Remembering some advice from a professor who was an Air Force reservist, military service became that new goal.

"I just could not see myself staying put the rest of my life," she said. "So I got married, joined the Air Force and moved to Sheppard Air Force Base."

Once in Texas, she talked to her patients and asked lots of questions of the wide variety of visitors she saw. She recalled a retired general talking about time spent during the Korean War.

"Talking to my patients, finding out about them and what they do is my favorite part of my job," she said. "I've learned a lot about the Air Force that way. The more I talk to them the more I understand the small role I play in the process of putting those bombs on target."

After reaching such a high plateau, what is the next goal in the colonel's path?

She said she'd love to deploy and experience in-theater eye-care, and she's also up for a squadron commander position this year.

"To me, squadron command is ultimately about taking care of your people, ensuring they have what they need to carry out the mission, but beyond that, command is about helping your folks set and achieve their own goals," she said. "I like the philosophy that if you take care of your people, your people will take care of the mission."