Make eye exams a back-to-school tradition

The Island Now

The start of a new school year can be filled with great excitement and anxiety for both parents and students. But eyesight cannot be ignored.

In addition to heading back to school, August is also Children’s Eye Health and Safety Month. The annual observance is a great reminder to get your child’s eyes checked before they return to the classroom, and it also reinforces the importance of maintaining good eye health and safety throughout the year.

Thinking about eye safety may not be a top priority for most kids, who spend their time  running to class, staring endlessly at computer screens, and studying or training hard for their school’s athletic program. By taking time to teach them a few important safety tips, parents can ensure their children will be able to focus on what really matters: their education.

Here are a few of the most important things to remember:

1. Get your child an eye exam before school starts.
The American Optometric Association recommends that children have their first comprehensive eye exam at age one, and again at age three. In addition, children of parents who wear glasses should have an eye exam after every year after the age of five. Vision screenings are useful but often miss binocular vision disorders and hidden vision problems.

2. Kids should wash their hands regularly.
The tears and front surface of the eye form a mucous membrane that transmits germs easily. Some eye infections (particularly viral infections similar to the common cold) are extremely contagious. Kids tend to rub their eyes quite a bit, so clean hands will cut-down on eye infections.

3. Ensure children wear protective eyewear when playing sports.
Sporting events are among the top cause of eye injuries. Even if a child does not need glasses to see, protective eyewear (sports goggles) are a must to guard against dust and dirt in the eyes, eyelid and corneal lacerations, and fractures of the bones that make up the eye socket or orbit.

4. Encourage kids to give their eyes a rest.
Excessive screen time can lead to eye-strain, blurred vision and even nearsightedness. Hand-held electronics (phones, tablets) and computer-use should be limited to 20 minutes at a time and no more than 2 hours a day – especially if someone in the family already wears glasses.

Fred , owner Focal Point Optical

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