Prevent Blindness has declared August as Children’s Eye Health and Safety Month. A variety of free resources from Prevent Blindness and its National Center for Children’s Vision and Eye Health at Prevent Blindness are available to the public, educators, and allied health professionals on children’s vision issues including web pages, printable fact sheets, social media graphics in English and Spanish, as well as expert and patient videos.
“We know that being able to see clearly is a strong predictor of academic success,” said Jeff Todd, president and CEO of Prevent Blindness, in a press release. “We’ve developed expert-approved resources that are designed to help kids reach their highest potential through healthy vision, for this school year and for life.”
According to the Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map and corresponding report, compiled in partnership with NORC at the University of Chicago using data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Vision and Eye Health Surveillance System, vision issues in children are common in the United States:
- One out of every 122 children has permanent vision loss.
- There are 25% more girls with vision loss than boys.
- One out of every 45 children in Medicaid/CHIP had amblyopia or strabismus diagnosis in 2019. (This includes one out of every 94 children with amblyopia and one out of every 70 with strabismus.)
- Among the community-level indicators included in the Prevent Blindness Children’s Vision Health Map, vision loss is most closely correlated with the prevalence of children in poverty (+55%).
- Nearly 4 million children in Medicaid/CHIP received at least one pair of covered eyeglasses in 2019.
Prevent Blindness offers free materials on children’s vision issues, including myopia, amblyopia, strabismus, retinopathy of prematurity, and the effects of juvenile diabetes on vision. Prevent Blindness has also developed new resources on patching for amblyopia, including video testimonials from children who are patching, and a new Focus on Eye Health Expert Series episode, featuring Sandra S. Block, OD, MEd, MPH.
Preventing eye injuries is a critical way to prevent vision loss in children. Dedicated resources on safety and eye protection including contact lenses, sports, UV, screen time and digital devices, and home and toy eye safety are also available.
Prevent Blindness said it is working to establish a national approach to children’s vision, and continues to advocate for the recently reintroduced Early Detection of Vision Impairments for Children (EDVI) Act, H.R. 2527. Led by Congressional Vision Caucus co-chairs Representatives Gus Bilirakis (R-FL-12) and Marc A. Veasey (D-TX-33), and recently co-sponsored by Rep. Janelle S. Bynum (D-OR-5), Rep. Andrew Garbarino (R-NY-2), Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, (D-DC-At Large), and Rep. Melanie A. Stansbury (D-NM-1), this bipartisan legislation, if passed, will establish the first national program specifically aimed at improving children’s vision and eye health.
The EDVI Act is currently supported by more than 100 state and national organizations. To learn more about the EDVI Act, and how to contact your representatives to be a voice for children’s vision, visit the Prevent Blindness Legislative Action Center.