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(NAPSI)-Optometrists
are giving the gift of peace throughout the country--peace of mind
to every mother that her baby is developing healthy eyes and vision
through InfantSEE®, a no-cost public health program designed
to provide one-time comprehensive eye and vision assessments to
infants between 6 and 12 months of age, offering early detection
of potential eye and vision problems at no cost, regardless of income.
Stacey
Zellers was pregnant when she first learned about the InfantSEE
program, but, like many parents, wondered if an eye assessment was
really necessary for an infant. Shortly after her daughter Grace
reached the 6-month mark, she scheduled an InfantSEE assessment
at her optometrist’s office.
As fate would have it, at the end of the 45-minute appointment,
the optometrist found a suspicious white mass in Grace’s left
eye. Grace was later diagnosed with retinoblastoma, the seventh
most-common pediatric cancer. Weeks later, Grace underwent surgery
to remove the cancerous mass and enucleate the eye. Today, Grace
is doing well and developing like other children her age.
“We
all know to take our children to the pediatrician, but many parents
wait until their child is ready to enter school before seeing an
eye doctor. For some children, like Grace, that could be too late,”
says Zellers. “The optometrists who volunteer their time and
resources to bring us InfantSEE say that the program is their gift
to America’s children. This year, my gift to America’s
moms is a reminder to have their infant’s eyes checked.”
More
than 7,600 optometrists nationwide volunteer to provide assessments
from their practices, and to date, an estimated 125,000 to 150,000
babies have had their eye health and vision assessed. The program
launched in 2005 as the result of a partnership between the American
Optometric Association and The Vision Care Institute of Johnson
& Johnson Vision Care, Inc., with support from former president
Jimmy Carter, honorary national chair and spokesman, and has since
been endorsed by the Office of the Surgeon General, Prevent Blindness
America, the American Public Health Association and the National
Association of Pediatric Nurse Practitioners.
“Just
as you would take your child to a dentist to help prevent cavities
and future dental problems, parents should take their children to
an eye and vision care specialist to help prevent potential eye
and vision problems,” says Scott Jens, O.D., F.A.A.O. and
InfantSEE chairman. “Both dentist and optometrist visits are
complementary to the routine well-care exams a baby receives at
the pediatrician’s office.”
Public
health experts recommend that children visit an eye care professional
in the first year of life--one of the most critical stages of visual
development--to identify the potential for eye and vision problems.
In fact, one in 10 children is at risk from undiagnosed eye and
vision problems, which, if undetected, could lead to permanent vision
impairment and, in rare cases like Grace’s, life-threatening
health risks. However, only 14 percent of children from infancy
to age 6 have had a comprehensive eye assessment from an eye care
professional.
Parents
can learn more about the program and find a participating optometrist
by visiting www.infantsee.org
or calling (888) 396-EYES (888-396-3937).
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