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Children Need Vision Check-Ups
Excerpt
By Serena Gordon, HealthDay
You've probably seen your pediatrician
check your child's eyes, or maybe you've heard from the school
nurse that your child's vision is fine. But are these quick screenings
thorough enough to detect most eye disorders?
Probably not, according to the
Vision Council of America and the American Optometric Association.
As many as one in seven children
need vision correction to see well, according to a press release
issued jointly by those associations. Of more concern is the 3.4
percent of children with a lazy eye and the 2.3 percent who have
a crossed or wandering eye because these conditions often aren't
detected in general screenings and can cause permanent vision
loss.
"Parents need to realize there's
more to vision than seeing the eye chart," says optometrist
Joel Zaba, a spokesman for the vision council. "Screening
will catch some problems, but we recommend a comprehensive exam
for children."
A comprehensive exam is one done
by a trained eye professional, such as an optometrist or ophthalmologist,
that looks not only at how well your child can read an eye chart,
but looks at the health of the eye and checks to be sure that
the eyes work together as a team, Zaba says.
Only 14 percent of kids under 6
had such an exam in the past year, reports the optometric association.
Slightly less than a third of youngsters between 6 and 16 have
had a comprehensive eye exam in the previous year.
Parents may mistakenly believe
that if their child has trouble seeing, they'll tell them about
the problem. But most kids don't even realize that they have a
problem. To them, the way they see is normal, Zaba explains.
If your child avoids close work
or seems to have a short attention span when doing close work,
such as reading or working on the computer, Zaba says that may
be a sign that there's a problem with your child's vision.
"If you feel like your child
is a lot brighter than school performance indicates, have your
child's eyes screened," says Zaba, who points out that 80
percent of the learning a child does in school is through visual
input.
Dr. Robert Cykiert, an ophthalmologist
at New York University Medical Center, says there are other signs
that your child may have vision problems. If your child is bumping
into things a lot, or if you see that one eye doesn't quite follow
the other as it should, it's time to get your child evaluated
by a professional.
If you have any serious eye problems
that run in the family, such as glaucoma or an eye turn, says
Cykiert, your child should begin having professional eye exams
starting as early as 6 months of age.
He recommends starting routine
professional eye exams around age 5, or just before your child
starts school. He also suggests finding a doctor that has no economic
interest in selling glasses to you or your child. And, he says,
if someone says your child needs "visual training,"
you should get a second opinion.
More information
The American Optometric Association
offers more information on vision in infants,
preschoolers
and school-age
children.
Reference
Source 101
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