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Eye Health Learning Center

6/17/2026· Dr. Aaron Evans· Everything dry eye
Eye Health Learning Center

Eye Health Learning Center

Learn About Your Eye Health

Dry Eye Rescue is a place to learn, shop, and find a real doctor. Our Learning Center pairs trusted education with products and a network of over 5,000 eye care professionals. Dry eye is our most developed area today, and we are expanding into more eye conditions over time.

Explore the Dry Eye Guide Find a Doctor

Written by the Dry Eye Rescue clinical team | Medically reviewed by the DER Medical Advisory Panel | Last updated June 2026

Key Takeaways

  • The Dry Eye Rescue Learning Center helps you understand eye conditions, find the right products, and locate a doctor.

  • Dry eye is the most common condition we cover, and it has the most complete guide today.

  • We are expanding into more areas, including macular health, eye allergies, digital eye strain, contact lens comfort, and low vision.

  • Every guide is reviewed by the DER Medical Advisory Panel and links to a network of over 5,000 eye care professionals.

  • If you are not sure where to start, the Dry Eye Guide and the DryEye Q assessment are the best entry points.

  • Education and shopping sit side by side here, so you can learn about a condition and act on it in one place.

Quick Answer: Where do I start?

Most people start with dry eye, since it is the most common reason for eye discomfort and the most developed guide on this site. Open the Dry Eye Guide to learn by topic, take the DryEye Q assessment if you want help describing your symptoms, or use the Doctor Locator to connect with an eye care professional near you. More condition guides are on the way.

Browse by Condition

Each condition becomes its own complete guide over time, with symptoms, products, and a path to a doctor. Dry eye, macular health, and eye allergies are available now. The rest are in development.

Available Now

Dry Eye

Symptoms, eye drops, vitamins, heat masks, lid hygiene, and testing, all in one complete guide.

Open the Dry Eye Guide

Available Now

Macular Health and AMD

Nutrition and support for the macula, including how eye vitamins fit into long-term eye health.

Open the Macular Health Guide

Available Now

Eye Allergies

Why eyes itch, what triggers allergies, how they overlap with dry eye, and how to find relief and a doctor.

Open the Eye Allergy Guide

Coming Soon

Digital Eye Strain

Why screens tire and dry the eyes, and simple habits and products that help.

Coming Soon

Contact Lens Comfort

Keeping eyes comfortable for contact lens wearers, including dryness and lens care.

Coming Soon

Low Vision

Tools and devices that support daily life for people with reduced vision.

Why We Start with Dry Eye

Dry eye is one of the most common reasons people seek eye relief, and it is frequently misunderstood. It is not simply a lack of tears. It is a condition of the ocular surface that can cause burning, grittiness, fluctuating vision, and even watery eyes, and it often has more than one cause.

Leading experts describe dry eye disease as a multifactorial condition of the ocular surface, where loss of tear film balance, inflammation, and surface changes work together to cause symptoms. Source: TFOS DEWS II Report (2017).

Why Dry Eye Rescue Is Different

Most places sell eye products or explain eye conditions, but rarely both, and almost never with a path to a real doctor. Dry Eye Rescue pairs honest education with trusted products and a network of over 5,000 eye care professionals, so you can learn what is happening, act on it, and get real care when you need it.

Find an Eye Care Professional Near You

Dry Eye Rescue works with a network of over 5,000 eye care professionals. Use the Doctor Locator to find a specialist near you, or take the DryEye Q assessment to prepare for your visit.

Locate a Doctor Take the DryEye Q

DER

Medically reviewed by the DER Medical Advisory Panel

Dry Eye Rescue content is reviewed by the DER Medical Advisory Panel, a group of eye care professionals focused on dry eye and ocular surface care. Dry Eye Rescue helps patients shop trusted eye care products, learn about their condition, and locate a specialist.

Important Disclaimer

This page is educational and does not replace medical advice from your eye care professional or healthcare provider. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Talk with your doctor before starting any supplement or treatment, especially if you take medications or have a health condition. Product and brand names referenced on this site are trademarks of their respective owners.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Dry Eye Rescue Learning Center?

It is a growing library of guides that explain eye conditions, help you choose the right products, and connect you with an eye care professional. Dry eye is our most complete area today, with more conditions on the way.

Where should I start?

Most people start with the Dry Eye Guide, because dry eye is so common. If you want help describing your symptoms before an exam, take the DryEye Q assessment.

What conditions will you cover next?

Planned guides include macular health and AMD, eye allergies, digital eye strain, contact lens comfort, and low vision. Each will follow the same format as the Dry Eye Guide.

Is this medical advice?

No. These guides are educational and reviewed by the DER Medical Advisory Panel, but they do not replace a personal evaluation. For diagnosis and treatment, see an eye care professional.

Can I shop and learn in the same place?

Yes. Each guide links to the relevant products so you can act on what you learn, while still pointing you to a doctor when an exam is the better next step.

Where can I find an eye doctor?

Use the Dry Eye Rescue Doctor Locator to find an eye care professional near you from our network of over 5,000 providers.

Start Learning

Open the Dry Eye Guide to learn by topic, take the DryEye Q assessment, or find an eye care professional near you.

Explore the Dry Eye Guide Find a Doctor Take the DryEye Q