Prevent Blindness provides opportunities for awareness and action in support of new legislation to provide much-needed funding for children’s vision programs in the United States.
Prevent Blindness has once again declared August as Children’s Eye Health and Safety Month. The goal is to educate parents, caregivers, professionals and policy makers on the important role vision and eye health plays in a child’s development, learning ability, and social engagement.
According to a news release, Prevent Blindness will offer free materials on children’s vision issues, such as myopia, amblyopia, providing information on access to eye care, and encourages individuals to advocate for federal funding for state and community children’s eye health programs.1
“Back in 1908, Prevent Blindness began as an organization dedicated to eradicating blindness in newborns. More than a century later, we continue to promote children’s vision and eye health through public education and by advocating for support of programs that provide access to eyecare,” said Jeff Todd, president and CEO of Prevent Blindness. “We encourage everyone to join us in this mission, and find out how to help us put our kids on the path to a lifetime of healthy vision.”
Volunteer researchers with the National Center for Children’s Vision and Eye Health at Prevent Blindness has authored a report, titled Association of Sociodemographic Characteristics with Pediatric Vision Screening and Eye Care: An Analysis of the 2021 National Survey of Children’s Health.2 The researchers found that only 53 percent of U.S. children received a vision screening in 2021. This disparity is even more pronounced among children from disadvantaged backgrounds.
Early detection and treatment is key. Without it, uncorrected vision disorders can impair healthy development, interfere with learning, and even lead to permanent vision loss. However, vision screening and regular eye care can help detect and treat potentially irreversible vision impairment. Visual functioning is a strong predictor of academic performance in school-age children.
Prevent Blindness will offer free resources including fact sheets, social media graphics, toolkits, videos and webpages on a variety of topics on children’s vision from infancy through adolescence. The NCCVEH, now celebrating its 15th anniversary, offers on getting children ready for school, taking a child to an eye doctor, preparing a child for wearing glasses or contact lenses, tips for preventing eye injuries, and much more.3
Moreover, Prevent Blindness kicked off its “Retinopathy of Prematurity (ROP) Education an d Support Program” as part of the inaugural ROP Awareness Week. It offers fact sheets and social media graphics in both English and Spanish as well as a dedicated web page and video series that includes parents of children with ROP, ROP patients, a pediatric ophthalmologist, psychologist, ROP nurse, and family support organizations. The program is supported by funding from Regeneron.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in a recent study, noted that between 2001 and 2017, the number of people under age 20 living with type 1 diabetes increased by 45 percent, and the number living with type 2 diabetes increased by 95 percent.4
Prevent Blindness offers its “Diabetes + The Eyes: Vision Health in Youth” website and fact sheet, in both English and Spanish. This resource provides detailed information on what parents and care partners need to know to help youth with diabetes protect their eye health. The resources were developed with support from UnitedHealthcare.
Additionally, the Prevent Blindness Focus on Eye Health Expert Series has free episodes dedicated to children’s vision and eye health topics including:5
The Office of Head Star’s National Center for Health, Behavioral Health and Safety is offering “Emerging Eye Health Issues in Young Children.”6 Expert speakers include Donna Fishman, director of the NCCVEH; Elise B. Ciner, OD, FAAO, Pennsylvania College of Optometry at Salus University; and Fuensanta A. Vera-Diaz, PhD, OD, Associate Professor of Optometry, New England College of Optometry, and volunteer on the Prevent Blindness Scientific Committee, who provided information on myopia prevention.
On the legislative front, Prevent Blindness is encouraging support for the Early Detection of Vision Impairment for Children Act, bipartisan legislation that seeks to establish the first ever federal program for children’s vision which will provide grants for states and communities to improve children’s vision and eye health through coordinated systems of care. It is endorsed by more than 80 state and national organizations.
State-by-state snapshots on children’s vision screening requirements, as well as percentage of children screened, and percentage of children who have received eye examinations, are also available at: Advocacy.PreventBlindness.org/edvi-childrens-vision-your-state/.
For general information on children’s eye health and safety, visit PreventBlindness.org/your-childs-sight/.
For additional information on the NCCVEH and its variety of programs, visit NationalCenter.PreventBlindness.org/. Vision care financial assistance resources in English and Spanish may also be found at: PreventBlindness.org/vision-care-financial-assistance-information/.