No.
It is important to understand that after LASIK or any lens implant surgery you still have (and will always have) a “nearsighted” eyeball, i.e. an eye that is “too big” in diameter. [This is typically the cause of the nearsightedness itself.] These procedures only adjust the focusing power at the front of the eye to take into consideration your longer eye.
The reason this is important is because the growth of a large eye has “stretched” the retina, the “film” lining the back of the eye. This stretching will often have thinned the retina in its periphery, creating a risk of holes or tears later in life. If unrecognized, such retinal breaks can develop into a retinal detachment, a very serious condition.
LASIK and lens implant surgery do not do away with this risk because the eye is still “too big” -just no longer nearsighted. You should be familiar with the signs and symptoms of retinal problems and not think they have been banished along with your glasses!