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A vision for offering help
Golden clinic offers free eye exams
by Linda Detroy Alexander
A canceled appointment led Dr. Eva Strube to make a generous offer.
“I was sitting there in my office and wishing that I could be working,” the Golden optometrist said.
Strube decided she would fill gaps in the schedule for her practice, Avenue Vision, at 1208 Washington Ave. in Golden, by offering free eye exams to children whose parents were struggling financially. That effort went well enough that this spring Strube decided to open the program to people of all ages.
“We’re all in this together,” she said. “And when we’re in the same boat, and the boat is sinking, everyone has to do something to get it back to shore. We all have to contribute in the way we’re able, and this is something I can do.”

Stube learned early the value of a personal approach to medicine. Her grandfather, born in the late 1800s, was a country doctor who traveled to his patients.
“When I asked him if he missed the ‘good old days,’ he said, ‘Oh, you mean the days when people got heat stroke and died,’” she said.
Strube studied optometry at Pacific University in Oregon, and found the practice in Golden after she graduated. She bought Avenue Vision in 1984.
“Golden was pretty funky little town back then,” she said. “My husband and I like the fact that it wasn’t really part of Denver then, and that Table Mesa kept it kind of separate.”
But, Strube said, as the town has grown, it has kept its small-town atmosphere.
That small-town approach guides what Strube is doing with her free clinic.
“We ask what people’s reasons are for wanting to be part of the clinic,” she said. “But they don’t have to present tax forms or proof that they need it. It’s more like they need a hand, and we can give it.”
She said anyone who needs help can take part in the clinic, but she is looking for middle-class folks who may not have access to other resources, such as Medicaid.
In addition to giving free exams, Strube offers clinic patients a sliding scale on basic frames and lenses. She said those who want a trendier look can get a discount on more expensive frames.
The program is open to anyone in the metro area. Stube said people should call the office at 303-279-3713 to get their name on a waiting list. Each morning, her office staff members look through the schedule and begin calling the people on the list to fill open slots.
She said that if she finds eye problems that require more than corrective lenses, she will make referrals to colleagues in the area.
Strube practices behavioral optometry. In addition to traditional exams and provision of corrective lenses, she also uses nutrition, corneal reshaping, magnets, vision therapy, homeopathic remedies and myopia relaxation in her practice.
Avenue Vision is open from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. on Mondays, from 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, and now on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.