- Benefits of regular comprehensive eye exams reinforced in analysis of military exams
- Doctors of optometry have safely performed thousands of optometric laser procedures
- Fun and vision-friendly holiday gift guides for kids
- Help patients understand the hazards of vaping to the eyes
- H5N1 ‘bird flu’ cases report conjunctivitis, teary eyes symptoms
- Link between eye examinations and fall prevention in older adults
- As eclipse edges closer, AOA promotes safe viewing
- Study underestimates doctors of optometry providing eye care to children
- Foresightedness on nearsightedness
- ‘Inadequate to meet demand’: Report spotlights declining ophthalmology workforce as America’s eye health needs grow
- AOA president: Annual eye exams set students up for success
- Myopia drops
- How doctors of optometry can help ease the burden for parents
- Doctors of optometry embrace myopia management
- The causes behind the causes
- human trafficking
- Wash, rinse, repeat: Reminding contact lens wearers about risky hygiene
- Keeping childrens vision in focus
- monkeypox national public health emergency
- July 4 can spark eye safety conversation with public
- FDA proposes eliminating cigarette cigar flavors
- Meeting the needs of an aging america
- multisystem diabetes prevention and management
- NEI releases detailed strategic plan on its priorities for the next five years
- A scary disconnect
- New partnership with MyEyeDr
- 10 reasons why you should be an InfantSEE provider
- Children’s vision-ultimate goal
- COVID-19 viral activity returning
- Doctors of optometry leaders in fight against myopia’s threat
- Stress test
- Eye and the storms
- AOA Emergency Children’s Vision Summit continues
- Childrens Vision Summit recap
- Pennsylvania doctors of optometry put high priority on children’s eye health and vision care
- AOA Children’s Vision Summit
- CDC updates COVID-19 eye protection
- Air pollution implicated in AMD study as US air quality declines
- Feds accelerate COVID-19 vaccination pace
- federally qualified health centers address underserved community eye care
- Doctors of optometry and staff preparing for next move in vaccine distribution
- AOA and affiliates advocate for optometry in Phase 1 COVID-19 vaccine distribution
- Twindemic Flu & COVID-19
- innovationing gene-editing technology
- Case study on overprescribing
- APHA urges preservation of children access to comprehensive vision care
- Do you know what your patients are searching for
- TBI and doctors of optometry
- doctors rebound from COVID-19 limitations settle into new normal
- contaminated hand sanitizer may cause methanol poisoning
- cigarette labels graphically depict smoking cataracts link
- Coronavirus emergency declared
- Excessive device use alters prekindergartners white brain matter
- FDA Drug Shortage Report
- FDA clears contact lens to slow myopia progression
- flu season on the way CDC urges early vaccines
- Vaping draws federal warnings rebuke amid billowing health concerns
- Doctors of optometry talk about ecigarette use
- Graphic warnings weighed to emphasize smokings health effects including blindness
- The cannabis conundrum
- Optometrys North Star
- Futuristic contact lens gains FDA marketing approval
- Amblyopias influence on sense of self
- Diabetes in young patients
- Diet soda habit associated with blinding diabetes complications
- The outlook for contact lenses
- OTC cold flu care What patients dont know can hurt them
- When Patients Lie to Doctors
- Comprehensive diabetes care
- Provide patients relief in winter spring summer and fall
- Meditation an adjunctive therapy for glaucoma
- doctors of optometry teammates in the post-concussion care
- When measles rush in
- Pressures on Understanding hypertensive guidelines
- The lowdown on vision rehabilitation
- Clean hands save sight
- 5 ways to offer neuro-optometric services in your practice
- Are you asking your patients about their e-cigarette use
- Ocular Manifestation of Lyme Disease
- March Madness
- Eye exams for Alzheimers
- Optometry seeking expanded role in diabetes care
- high calcium increase risk of AMD
- How to get hands-on with dry eye
- measles outbreak eye-catching for doctors of optometry
- prescribing fitting bioptic telescope system for driving
- Optometry is essential in care for patients with concussions TBIs
- prescribing and fitting a bioptic telescope system for driving part II
- Tips on providing optometric care for children with autism
- Screen time for children under 5
- Vision and batting
- Reading for the AMD patient
- Vision impairment cognitive decline go hand in hand
- doctors of optometry can provide a jump on inflammatory bowel disease treatment
- Legal doesn’t always mean safe in drivers vision
- Study pulls back covers on links between glaucoma and sleep
- Exploring the promise of retinal prostheses
- New resource helps doctors guide patients to proper sunglasses
- How fish insects could aid presbyopic patients
- Imaging over in person exams Telehealth study misses point
- InfantSEE helps young doctors of optometry build awareness and their practices
- community-health-centers
- VA VISION
- PedPosted
- Counterfeit Contact Lens Infections Study
- Dont delay vaccinate now
- Lather rinse repeat The DIY vaccine
- optometric surgical procedures courses
Study: Early intervention can pay dividends in the classroom
October 2, 2017
An estimated 1 in 5 U.S. preschool children have vision problems and 1 in 4 school-age children wear corrective eyewear.
Tag(s): Clinical Eye Care, Public Health
Today is National Child Health Day, and a recent study underscores how vision can contribute to children's academic success and the role of doctors of optometry.
Published in the International Journal of Educational Research, the study looked at the impact of impaired vision on the academic success of 109 schoolchildren, specifically 8- and 9-year-olds in the third grade. "Multi-sensory stimulation is essential in early development, as it encourages learning and brain plasticity," researchers at Queensland University of Technology wrote.
Up to 70% of daily classroom learning demands visual input-distance and near-vision acuity, contrast and sustained use of accommodative convergence, according to an earlier Australian study of fifth and sixth graders published in Clinical and Experimental Optometry.
In the April study, researchers found that 30% of the third graders, who were identified as having "borderline" or "unsatisfactory" vision, had "significantly lower" scores on national standardized tests for reading, grammar, punctuation, spelling and numeracy compared to their peers. The students were initially screened and then referred for more comprehensive eye examinations.
The AOA strongly recommends comprehensive eye examinations between the ages of six months and one year for infants and stresses the limitations of screenings.
"These findings are important, not only in terms of screening children for visual problems early, but also correcting vision problems to ensure optimal functioning in the classroom environment and opportunities to learn," the researchers say.
"Awareness also needs to extend beyond eye health professionals and include policy makers, as well as teachers and the wider community," they say.
'Visual hunger'
The study emphasizes why a regular, comprehensive eye examination by a doctor of optometry is so important. The earlier an eye condition is detected and diagnosed, the sooner the condition can be addressed, corrected and managed, says Glen Steele, O.D., chair of the AOA InfantSEE® and Children's Vision Committee. InfantSEE is a public health program managed by Optometry Cares®—The AOA Foundation.
Dr. Steele travels thousands of miles each year in the states and abroad, making the case to doctors of optometry and parents about the essentialness of eye health and vision care for infants. Professor of pediatric optometry at Southern College of Optometry in Memphis, Tennessee, Dr. Steele is on a mission.
"There is a quotation I cherish: 'A child is born with visual hunger,'" says Dr. Steele, citing a comment attributed to Arnold Gesell, M.D., who co-authored the landmark Developmental Diagnosis with Catherine Amatruda in 1941.
Doctors of optometry, in partnership with parents, can feed that hunger.
"Even in early infant development, the eyes and vision are the pathfinders for the infant to extend out into their surrounding world," Dr. Steele adds.
Feeding the visual hunger
It's never too soon for parents to help support their children's visual development.
"For parents, visual readiness begins at birth," Dr. Steele says. "Visual readiness does not happen in isolation and needs guidance and involvement by a parent."
What can parents do? Dr. Steele recommends parents:
- Be interactive and move with your child during play.
- Arrange "tummy time" for infants. It's not just time on the floor. It is a wonderful time for explorations and satisfying curiosity.
- Look in their eyes while doing any activity with them.
- Play visual games with infants while feeding them solid foods, such as moving the utensil like an airplane as it goes into their mouths.
- Select playthings with different sizes to begin development of size relationships.
- Make that first appointment with your doctor of optometry for your infant, between the ages of six months and one year. Find a doctor of optometry near you.