About Dr. Jeffrey D. Horn

"As a surgeon, it's important to me to explain complex problems in an understandable way. The personal interaction with the people who come to me for care is the most enjoyable part of my work."
Dr. Jeffrey D. Horn
Dr. Horn’s CV
My interest in medicine and caring for people was formed at an early age. I lost my mother to cancer when I was twelve, and so I unfortunately spent a considerable amount of time during my childhood in hospitals and dealing with illness.
A couple of years after my mother died, I took up playing the drums. It provided me with an outlet to express myself creatively, and this is still true today. It taught me that practice, hard work, commitment to excellence, and continually trying to improve my abilities were needed to excel. I think I apply those same ideals to medicine and surgery in constantly trying to improve the care I provide my patients. It is important to me to teach, and to continually research new ideas.
As a beginning 4th year med student, I suffered a serious facial injury with broken bones, after colliding with a teammate during a competitive softball championship. The severity of the injury left me unable to continue my rotation in Orthopedics, but I needed to continue my clinical training, and chose to work with an Ophthalmologist in his private practice. After 4 weeks of watching him care for patients in his office, while also performing amazing surgeries, it was clear this is what I needed to do. My interests in medicine, physiology, physics, optics, and mathematics, while also performing microsurgery, fit the specialty perfectly. The coordination, ambidexterity and hand control I learned from drumming help me as an eye surgeon.
Today, I can’t see myself doing anything else. The progressive nature of the field, with rapid improvements underway in vision correction through my own efforts and those of my colleagues, make my practice extremely gratifying, challenging, and humbling.
A recent patient, who had seen several other eye doctors before seeing me, had extreme myopia and cataracts, and desperately wanted to improve her vision while achieving some independence from the glasses she had worn since childhood. Her case was complex, and I spent a fair amount of time explaining her options. At one point she asked me why I was devoting so much time to her. She had never had a physician do that, and she was skeptical. She ultimately allowed me to remove her cataract and implant a new multifocal lens. In the recovery room several minutes after her surgery I checked on her and removed her eye shield. She could immediately see both far and close for the first time in her life, and the look on her face and in her eyes said it all. I reminded her of her question to me before the surgery, and explained that being allowed to participate in this moment with her was the reason I spent so much time with her.
My life is equally full outside of medicine. I am happily married to my wife Rita, who is a radiologist, and understands my devotion to my patients and profession. I am a very involved dad with my son Ryan, and my daughter Katie. I help coach my son’s baseball teams, and look forward to watching my daughter grow. I still love to play the drums.
| FELLOWSHIP | UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO La Jolla, California Cornea, External Disease and Refractive Surgery July 1993 – June 1994 |
| RESIDENCY | NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY Chicago, Illinois Ophthalmology Chief Resident, 1992 July 1990 – June 1993 |
| INTERNSHIP | CEDARS-SINAI MEDICAL CENTER Los Angeles, California Internal Medicine July 1989 – June 1990 |
| EDUCATION | SUNY HEALTH SCIENCE CENTER at SYRACUSE Syracuse, New York Doctor of Medicine, Magna cum Laude May 1989SUNY at STONY BROOK Stony Brook, New York Bachelor of Science, Biology, Summa Cum Laude May 1985 |
| FACULTY And STAFF APPOINTMENTS | STAFF PHYSICIAN Baptist Hospital Nashville, TennesseeSt. Thomas Hospital Nashville, TennesseeNashville V. A. Medical Center Nashville, TennesseeASSISTANT PROFESSOR Department of Ophthalmology and Visual Sciences Vanderbilt University Medical Center Nashville, Tennessee August 1997 – July 2005CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR Department of Ophthalmology University of California, San Diego July 1993 – April 1996 |
| HONORS and AWARDS | “America’s Top Ophthalmologists”, Consumers Research Council, 2004-2005 American Academy of Ophthalmology Lifetime Learning Award, 2005 First surgeon in Tennessee to remove cataract via laser, Jan. 8, 2002 Lexington Who’s Who in America, 2000 Outstanding Surgical Instructor, Vanderbilt Eye Center, 1999 |