Center for Healthy Vision
Caring for Your Vision
Comprehensive Eye and Vision Examination
Recommended Eye Examination Frequency for Pediatric Patients and Adults
Recommended Eye Examination Frequency for Pediatric Patients and Adults
Recommended Examination Frequency For the Pediatric Patient
Patient Age | Examination Interval |
| | Asymptomatic/Risk Free | At Risk |
| Birth to 24 Months | At 6 months of age | By 6 months of age or as recommended |
| 2 to 5 years | At 3 years of age | At 3 years of age or as recommended |
| 6 to 18 years | Before first grade and every two years thereafter | Annually or as recommended |
Children considered to be at risk for the development of eye and vision problems may need additional testing or more frequent re-evaluation. Factors placing an infant, toddler, or child at significant risk for visual impairment include:
- Prematurity, low birth weight, oxygen at birth, grade III or IV intraventricular hemorrhage
- Family history of retinoblastoma, congenital cataracts, or metabolic or genetic disease
- Infection of mother during pregnancy (e.g., rubella, toxoplasmosis, venereal disease, herpes, cytomegalovirus, or AIDS)
- Difficult or assisted labor, which may be associated with fetal distress or low Apgar scores
- High refractive error
- Strabismus
- Anisometropia
- Known or suspected central nervous system dysfunction evidenced by developmental delay, cerebral palsy, dysmorphic features, seizures, or hydrocephalus
Recommended Examination Frequency For the Adult Patient
Patient Age | Examination Interval |
| | Asymptomatic/Risk Free | At Risk |
| 18 to 60 years | Every two years | Every one to two years or as recommended |
| 61 and older | Annually | Annually or as recommended |
Patients at risk include those:
- with diabetes, hypertension, or a family history of ocular disease (e.g., glaucoma, macular degeneration)
- working in occupations that are highly demanding visually or eye hazardous
- taking prescription or nonprescription drugs with ocular side effects
- wearing contact lenses
- who have had eye surgery
- with other health concerns or conditions.